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Full text of "The Atlanta Constitution 1934-06-25: Vol 67 Iss 13"

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{E=|] THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION 


2 ¥ x 


JIMMY WEDELL PLUNGES TO DEATH IN PLANE — 


WHILE GIVING INSTRUCTIONS TO STUDENT 


ROOSEVELT ORDER ABERTA PREMIER Pilot and Cameraman Killed WQMANSUCCUNBS LOUISIANA CRASH 
50 MILLION USE FACES JURY TODAY samme 0 AUTO IIURES NSTANTY FATAL 
IN DROUTH REL ON CIS CHARGE (iS CA TO OTHERS HURT TO FAMOUS RACER 


Huge Sum, Part of $525,-| Canadian Provincial Of- Mrs. Mattie Williams, 46, 
000,000 Appropriated By ficial Stands Accused of Dies at Grady, 26th Vic- 
Congress for Parched Ruining Life of Former tim of Year; Girl, 8, and 
States, Will Be Allo- Employe. Boy, 10, Are Injured. 
cated Immediately. : 


4 


A. P. Service. 
United Press 
N. A. N. A. 


The South’s 
Standard 
Newspaper 


Single Copies: Daily, 5c; Sunday, 10¢. 
Daily and Sunday: Weekly 20c; Monthly 90c. 


Entered at Atlanta Postoffice 


ONLY MORNING NEWSPAPER 
As Second-Class Mail Matter. 


PUBLISHED IN ATLANTA 


ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 25, 1934. 


hand 


* 


ine Meee 


Premier on Trial Ace Meets Death 


Ship Gets Into Trouble 
at Altitude of 300 Feet 
and Noted Pilot Fails 
in Desperate Effort To 
Avert Crash. 


Mrs. Mattie Williams, 46-year-old 
fruit peddler, of 441 Ethel street, 
N. W., who suffered a broken neck, 
head injuries and a broken leg Thurs- 
day night when she walked into the 
side of an atttomobile at West Peach- 
tree and Fourth streets, died at 2:30 
o'clock Sunday afternoor at Grady 
hospital. Several other persons were, 


EDMONTON, Alta.. June 24.—(#) 
Charges of seduction brought by the 
22-year-old daughter of a railway en- 
gineer against John FE. Brownlee, 
premier of Alberta, will be heard be- 
fore the supreme court here tomor- | 
row. . | 

Pretty Vivian MacMillan and her | 
father, A. D,. MacMillan, of Edson, | 
claim the premier induced the girl to) 
leave home with an offer of a gov- | 
ernment job, and established relations 


STUDENT AVIATOR 
BELIEVED DYING 


MINOR MEASURES | 4 
SIGNED BY F.D.R.| 
Sabbath at Hyde Park) 
Home: Devoted Almost 


‘Tragedy Occurs Close to 
| Patterson Hangar Where 


Entirely to Business By 
Chief Executive. 


HYDE PARK, N. Y., June 24.—) : 
(UP)—President Roosevelt in a Sab- 
bath devoted almost entirely to busi- 
ness, signed an executive order that 
will pour $150,000,000 of government 
funds into drouth areas of the west | 
and middle west. | 

The sum is part of the $525,000,000 | 
appropriated by the last congress for 
the parched states and will be atest Pele seiatere. 
cated as follows: 

$12,500,000 for 
tion camps. 

$25,000,000 loans for seed, feed and 
freight. 

$56,000,000 for federal 
relief grants to states. 

$12,500,000 purchase of lands. 

$43,000,000 to secretary of agricul- 
ture for purchase, sale, gift or other 
distribution of seed, feed and _ live 
stock and transportation thereof. 
Other Bills Signed. 

The president also signed several 
minor claim measures and these were 
dispatched to Washington during the 
afternoon. 

The president returned to business 
shortly after returning from morning 


services at St. James Episcopal church ed in Wisconsin, Illinois; 
in Hyde Park village. He attended | Five Are Drowned 


services there with Mrs, Roosevelt | 
and Elliott and Ruth Googins Roose- 
velt. | 


J. B. 
of 


charge seduction 


MIDWEST STORMS 
CLAIM SIX LIVES: 


civilian conserva- 


emergency 


CHICAGO, 


t 


Brownlee, premier of Alberta, 
goes to trial today in Edmonton on a 
al é preferred by 
Vivian MacMillan, 22, a former gov-|ton, in the foothills of the Rockies: 


DAMAGE IS HEAVY 


Half Million Dolla rs in os Semndent placed a government car 
“ia 
Property Losses Exact- 


marriage. 


ing $10,000 damages on 


Damages Asked. 

Damages were asked by the plain- 
tiffs, too. though the amount is not 
stated. A jury of six will hear the 
case before Justice W. C, Ives. 


road town of Edson, west of Edmon- 


'MacMillan is an assistant locomotive 
foreman. 
| The claim states MacMillan enter- 
{tained Premier Brownlee at ‘his home 
| when the executive was in Edson on 
political business, 
further setting fort 
“The defendant proceeded 
marked attention to Vivian 
lan and persuaded her to 
father’s home and go to Edmonton, 
‘promising to procure for her a_posi- 


to 
MacMil- 


tion with the provincial government, | 


| and promising to look after her well- 
'being;: and that he, the defendant, 
would act as guardian to her while 
she was in Edmonton. 

| _Took Her for Rides. 

| “Having succeeded in getting the 
said Vivian MacMillan to Edmonton 
: er disposal and frequently took 
her for automobile drives, and took 
[her to his house and introduced her 
to his family and told her she was 
to consider his house as her home.” 

| The statement said Brownlee se- 
duced the girl, first in the fall of 
1950, and that he “laughed at her 
old-fashioned scruples.” and told her 


June 24.—(/)—Severe that he was “lonely and unhappy.” 
At luncheon he had as his guests wind, rain and lightning storms raged | 


It added that the premier got Viv- 


Governor Herbert W. Lehman, of New| over Wisconsin and Illinois late last|!@"@ @ position in the provincial gov- 


York, affectionately referred to as “my | 

good right-arm” when chief executive | erty damage approximating a 

of New York, and Edward J. Flynn,! mijiion dollars and the death of 

Bronx democratic leader New 
York's secretary of state. 
Politics Talked? 

The presence of these men. iu view 

of the approaching democratic state 


and least six persons. 


night and early today, causing prop-| 


Dawn found working parties out iM) 4+ 


close to his 
afternoons and 


ernment in an office 
own. On Saturday 


half-| Sundays he required her to come to 
at} his office in various parliament build- 
weather he took her 


In good 
in various 
different 


| ings, 
| driving government 
times, it is 


cars. 


| claimed, 


ithe area to repair the havoc of the’ Brownlee insisted on Vivian staying 
| worst storms so far this season. Tele-| at his house, and, when she objected, 


about July, 1930, 
h that: | 


pay | 


with her that caused the blasting of a | 
romance when another man proposed | 


The provincial executive denied all | 
charges and filed a counterclaim ask- | 
the ground | 
: | the charges were part of a conspiracy | 
= | to injure his reputation. 


The statement filed hy the plain- | 
tiffs goes back to 1930. when Vivian's | 
father was mayor of the little rail- | 


mapping project for the PWA. 


RUTLAND, Vt., June 24.—(UP)—glided with a national guard biplane 


A pilot and a photographer were 
_killed today when two airplanes col- 
| lided in mid-air over the new munici- 
| pal airport, a half-hour before dedica- 
‘jon services were to hegin. 

The dead were Pilot William H. 
McMullen, 52, and R. L. Oakes, 30, 
employed hy the Aerial Exploration 
— Company, Roosevelt field, New 
Pork, 


piloted by Captain Herbert A. Mills, 
of Hartford, Conn., attached to the 
43d division air squadron. Mills was 


rying a parachute and landed safely. 
cut to take part in the dedication 
services, said he was about to land 
when he looked down and saw the 


Continued in Page 2. Column 6. 


Their Bellanca cabin monoplane col- 


VIENNA GIVES U.S. 
“PODERIAY REPORT 


— 


Austrian Police Confi- 
_ dent Material Will Pro- 


| vide Indictment Basis. 


convention, gave rise to reports that 


— mee ne ee ee a 


Continued ‘in Page 2. Column 4. 


| phone and power lines were 
‘into wreckage and fallen trees cross- 
patched the debris. Several buildings 
were damaged badly by wind and fire 


Fonrana, 


twisted | {hreatened her with loss of her posi- | 
tior 


destroved a square block at 
| Wis., 


Riess Hunts in Vain 


For Dillinger, Floyd 


BRANSON, Mo., 24.-—()-— 
Sixty state and federal peace officers, 
seeking Charles (Pretty Boy) Floyd, 


southwestern desperado, raided = an 
Ozarks hills resort today and found 
only the surprised owner, Clyde Higgs. | 

Some of the officers who participat- | 
ed said they had believed John Dil-' 
linger, Indiana outlaw, also might be’ 
staying at the ranch, but conceded 
afterward there was little to support 
thie belief. 

The raiders. machine guns readr for 
action. acted upon information given 
by a Springfield taxicab driver, who 
said he had taken a physician and a 
nurse to the place to treat two 
wounded men. The physician denied BEE PINE ehh ARES ERM 
he had treated anyone there. Continued in Page 2, Column 4. 


and a dance hall 


lein, Tl. 
Fire of 


six known dead 


the 


victims of lashing waves. whipped to 
inland 
One youth 


barn col- 


fury on Lake Michigan and 
lakes by the high winds. 


to death as a 


June 
was crushed 
lapsed. 

The 
Waukegan, 
liam R, 


Hall, 
Mrs. 
of 


dead: Wilfored FE. 
Ill., attorney: 
fehanna, 30, wife 


Kuhns, 


eph 22, Chicago; 


ee a — 
19, Marshfield, Wisg d an 
Chicagoan. — 
and Mrs. 
in Fox lake. 
sudden squall 


tified 
Hall 

drowned 

when a 


Benanna 


caught 


ey 


near Munde- 


were 


44, 
Wil- 
the 
Waukegan Corporation counsel; Jos-| 
Allen F, 
Thomas, 24, Chicago; Verland Ayre, 
uniden- 


were | 
near Chicago, 
their 
sailboat and capsized it. Four others; 


The News at a Glance 


Clip this each dar and make your scrapbook a thumbnail history. June? 25, 1934. 


LOCAL: 

Judge FE. Marvin Underwood to aid 
in preparation of petition for presi- 
dential pardon for Bert Long, federal 
pen prisoner. Page 4. 

Judge W. C. Munday Sr., widely- 
known Atlanta lawyer and tormer 
Buckhead jurist, dies of heart : 

E . Page 4. 

Mrs. Maitie Williams, 44, injured WASHINGTON. 
last Thursday when she walked into; Snell, G. O. P. house 
side of automobile. dies at hospital: | democratie administration “bluffing 
years deaths mount to 26. Pace the publie.” race 2. 

Permits said misused, Commissioner RUTLAND. Vt.—Two killed as air- 
of Game and Fish Craver, orders sus-/ planes collide 3.000 feet over city. 
pension of all scientific bird collecting Page 1. 
in Georgia. Page 3. (onn.—Recluse kills 

Mrs. Mary Gondelock, Soluiers’ wounds woen.an, Page 2. 
home superintendent wounded = by 


Pdrouth relief funds for 
seed purchases. 
LUBBOCK, Texas.—Two 
ei as hostages by four fleeing jail 
breakers, ’ 


stock and 
‘ave 1. 


age <. 


former United States senator who de- 


leader. 


WOLCOTT. 


(wo men, 


state officers raid  ranchhouse 
search for John Dillinger. Page 1. 
os CLINTON, Iil.—Youth 
Commissioner sending extortion letters to 
"age o..S. Gifford and Cornelius 
biit ITT. 
FOREIGN: 


STATE: 
THOMASVILLE 
John C. Vaughn dies. 

MACON—94,681 jobless placed in| 
jobs in state. Page 5. | 
SAVANNAH—Southern publishers; VIENNA.—Report of Poderjay in- 
meet to discuss establishment of pine | vestigation forwarded New York po- 
al Page 1.) lice. 
M : BUENOS AIRES—C icting . 
PATTERSON, La.—James RK. We-| wing et ef Se 
dell, famous speed pilot, killed in air-— 
plane crash. Page 1. 
CHICAGO.—Storm kills six: causes 
heavy damage in Illinois and Wis- | 
consin. Page 1. | 
HYDE PARK. N. Y.—President 
Roosevelt allocates £150.000,000 of ' op's address to 75,000 Germans. Page 3. 


Walter 
Vander- 


Paraguay in Gran Chaco accounts. 


PARIS.—Police combat disorders in 
half a dozen French cities. 


kidnap- | 


_—s 


DENVER.—Charlies SS, Thomas, | 
fied gold hoarding order, dies at 84. | 


— Representative | 
SAYS | 


BRANSON, Mo.—Sixty federal and | 
in | 


confesses | 


Page 1.. 


Page 1. | 
ualty reports come from Bolivia and | 
Page 4. | 
Page ;}. | 


BERLIN.—Breach between Catho-| 
lic church and state widened by bish- | 


Left dob. 
“Solely by reason of the defendant's 


actions,” said the statement of claims. | 


“Vivian MacMillan became physically 
and mentally ill and suffered a nerv- 
ous hreakdown and was forced 
fo leave her position and return 
her father’s home. 

“In or about June. 1933. 
man to whom the said Vivian MacMil- 
lan was becoming deeply attached 
proposed marriage and she felt 
she could not accept his proposal of 
marriage until she disclosed her rela- 
tions with the defendant. 
and the proposal of marriage 
withdrawn and the said Vivian Mac- 
Millan lost her chance of marrying 
‘and having a home of her own.” 

The premier’s defense asserted the 
claim is “false. frivolous, vexatious, 
scandalous and an abuse of the process 


of court,” and alleged the whole mat- | 


ter to be part of a conspiracy to in- 
jure his reputation. The conspiracy 
charges, subject of a 
were denied in another document filed 
hy Vivian and John Caldwell. a stu- 
dent. 


i 


_ Ex-Convict Is Grilled 


In Robles Kidnapi 
s Kidnaping 
| LA JUNTA, Col., June 24.—(4)— 
| Don Rodriguez. 23, Arizona ex-con- 
| viet. Was questioned here today as a 
| possible suspect in the kidnaping of 
June Robles, six-year-old Tucson 
| (Arizona) girl. 
| Sheriff Ralph Whitton declared 
Rodriguez exhibited knowledge of the 
kidnaping and said he was in Arizona 
| April 25, when the girl was abducted 
on her way home from school. He 
left Arizona May 15, the day after 
the girl was found chained in a rude 
den in the desert near Tueson. the 
sheriff said. 


Boy Confesses “Plot” 
Against Phone Executive 


CLINTON. Il, June 24.—(—)— | 


Francis Goodrich, 19, recent grad- 
uate of Clinton High school, where 
he was regarded as a student above 
average. confessed today, authori- 
ties said. he had sent extortion let- 
ters to Walter F. Gifford, president 
of the American Telephone & Tele- 
graph Co., and to Cornelius Vapn- 
derbilt IIT, 

Asked his motive. according to 
Deputy Sheriff Leslie O. Orr, the 
youth said: 

“Other people are writing letters 
demanding money and getting by 
with it, so why can’t J?” 

Orr added that despite the fact 
that Goodrich was rated high as a 
student, he believed some mental 
quirk might have been responsible 
for the writing of the letters. 


to | 


a young. 


that | 


She did so, | 
was. 


counterclaim. | 


VIENNA, June 24.—(P)\—The 
Vienna international police organiza- 
tion, confident that evidence will sup- 
| port a murder charge against Captain 
Ivan Poderjay, today 
romplete report 
New York. 

Police then withdrew from active 
participation in the case, hoping that 


on the hasis of their findings Ameri- | 


ean authorities will be able to extra- 
dite Poderjay, husband of Agnes Tuf- 
verson, missing New York and Detroit 
lawyer. 


Viennese officials stated they  be- 
lieve Miss Tufverson was slain, but 
| would not enlarge on their reasons 
for believing so. The basis for their 
conclusion is contained in data on the 
/ way to New York. Bruno Barber, 
|'head of the international police or- 
| ganization, said that Poderjay’s pos- 
session of trunks and clothing of Miss 
-Tufverson remain their most 
tant evidence. 

Now that police have withdrawn 
| from the inquiry, the investigation is 
| being continued by courts, and un- 
der Austrian law is concealed in deep- 
est secrecy. 

But amateur detectives kept the 
'cafes buzzing with speculation. 


| A theory which received much pop- 


| ular and some official credence is that | 


Poderjay is involved with an organi- 
|zation of international spies. Another 
version is that several principals in 
(the strange disappearance of the 
American woman and in Poderjay’s 
‘complex matrimonial experiences are 
| spies, 

NEW YORK UNDECIDED 

| ON SENDING DETECTIVE 
| NEW YORK, June 24.—(?)—Pre- 
| pared to carry on their search for the 
vanished Agnes Colonia Tufverson 
indefinitely, police today correlated 
the results of a month’s investigation 
| before deciding whether to send a de- 
tective to Vienna to 


prisoner there. 


Captain John H. Ayres, of the miss- | 


ing persons bureau, informed that a 
complete report of evidence gained by 
Vienna police had been forwarded, 
awaited it eagerly. 

It seemed probable that if a de- 
tective is ordered to Austria to ques- 
tion Poderjay, it will be Arthur C. 
Johnson, of the alien squad,: who will 
sail for Spain in July in connection 
with the trial of a Spaniard for mur- 


| der. He would go to Vienna first. 


Decision to send Johnson appeared 
near because he has been assigned to 
familiarize himself with all the evi- 
dence assembled in the Tuiverson 
ease. The cost of his trip to Vienna 
would be about $2,000, police said. 

Officers were detailed to the apart- 
ment building where Miss Tufverson 


lived after other tenants complained 
_ of the curious crowds. Officers at the 


entrances were instructed that attend- 
ants no longer should be allowed to 
discuss the case. 


dispatched a/| 
of their findings to. 


IMPpor- | 


question her | 
husband, Ivan Ivanovitch Poderjay, a 


PUBLISHERS STUDY 
PINE PAPER PLANT 


Southern Group Meets in 


} 
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| Savannah Today To Plan 
New Industry. 


a 


' 


i 


The newsprint committee of the 
Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso- 
ciation will meet here tomorrow and 
Tuesday to investigate the feasibility 
of establishing a slash pine paper- 
making industry in the south. 

As part of the inquiry, the publish- 
'ers’ committee will visit 
‘mental plant where Dr. Charles H. 

has developed a_ process for 


| Herty 
using slash pine in making news- 


print. 

The committee is headed by James 
G. Stahlman, of the Nashville Ban- 
ner, and comprises Clark Howell Jr., 
of The Atlanta Constitution; Curtis 
B. Johnson, of the Charlotte (N. C.) 
Observer; J. P. Fishburn, of the 
Roanoke (Va.) Times and World 
News; Victor H. Hanson. of the Bir- 
'mingham News and Age-Herald; My- 
ron G. Chambers, of the Knoxville 
(Tenn.) News-Sentinel: J. I. Mapes. 
‘of the Beaumont (Texas) Enterprise 
‘and Journal, and Emanuel Levi, of 
‘the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal. 
| -E. K. Gaylord, 
City Oklahoman and Times, is an ex- 
‘officio member of the committee. 

William Chandler, general manager 
of the Scripps-Howard newspapers 
and chairman of the newsprint com- 
mittee of the American Newspaper 
Publishers Association, also plans to 
attend the session. Mills B. Lane, 
chairman of the board of the Citizens 
& Southern National bank, will en- 
tertain the publishers at a dinner 
Monday night at the Lebanon planta- 
tion. 


4 Killed, 8 Injured 
As 3 Autos Collide 


} 


' 


Four persons lost their lives and eight 


volving three automobiles on United 
States highway 41, near the Evans- 


ay. 

The dead are Isom Small, 30; his 
wife, Dorothy, 26: Cleatis 
23, and his wife, Gladys, all of Ev- 


ansville. 


collision and three others were hurt 
about an hour later when an automo- 
bile ran into the crowd gathered at 
the scene. 

The three-way collision occurred, 
witnesses said, when a roadster, oc- 
cupied by the Small and Powers 
couples, sped onto the main highway 
from a side road without regard to a 
stop sign. Arthur Burke's automobile 
collided with the roadster and an in- 
stant later Leroy Warner's car 


crashed into the wreckage. 


Mills, just arriving from Connecti-| 


wil 


the experi-| 


others were injured in a collision in-| 
ville-Henderson, Ky., bridge, early to-, 
Powers, | 


Five persons were injured in the) 


’ 
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| 
J 


thrown from the plane but was car-'! 


SAVANNAH. Ga., June 24.—(4)— | 


} 
' 


| 


RO . wy 
| William H. McMullen, left, and Raymond L. Oakes, photographer, | bile accidents : ! 
|as they appeared in Atlanta recently during the course of an aerial | Atlanta eines anuary +. 


leave her | 


of the Oklahoma 


injured here Sunday in two automo- 
bile accidents. 

Mrs. Williams was attempting to 
cross West Peachtree when she waiked 
into the side of a macnine going north 
on West Peachtree and driven by C. 
C. Whitaker, 2169 Peachtree road., 
He took her to Grady hospital. Whit- 
aker reported the accident to police 
and no case was made Thursday 
night. Friday, however, Patrolman 
C, R. Adams, assigned to investigate 
accidents, booked a case of reckless 
driving against Whitaker and set it 
for hearing on July 27, 

The Jearh of Mrs. 

Williams as the result | 

“of the accident Thurs- | 

day night brought to} 

°6 the total number of | 

deaths from automo- 

in the city limits of 

The total 
for the month of June is 9. 

Mrs. Williams is survived by her} 
husband, J. N. Williams; three sis- 
ters. Mrs. Willie Smith, Mrs. C. Y. 
Walker and Miss Frances Crews; and 
four daughters, Helen, Ruth, Louise 


and Velvia Williams. 

Funeral services for Mrs. Williams 
ill be conducted at 2:30 o'cloek this 
afternoon at the Bellwood Baptist 
church, with the Rev. W. 8, Pruitt of- 
ficiating. Interment in charge’ of the 
West Side Funeral Home will be in 
the Mount Harmony churchyard in 
old Milton county. 

Funeral arrangeweuts for Howard 
Baker, 16-year-old niessenger boy, who 
died Saturday night of injuries a few 
hours after his bicycle had crashed 
into an automobile at Glen Iris drive 
and North avenue, were announced 
Sunday by Harry G. Poole. He was 
the son of Mrs. Estelle Baker, 304 
Woodward avenue. A case of reck- 
less driving was made against Miss 
Louise Crowley. of 9)6 Virginia 
circle, N. E., driver of the machine 
young Baker struck. 

Services will be held at 4 o’clock 
this afternoon at the chapel of Harry 
G. Poole with the Rev. Stuart R. 
Oglesby officiating. Interment will 
be in the Ben Hill Methodist church- 
yard. 

Buena Mae Post, 8-year-old dangh- | 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Post, 
of 12 Ridge avenue, was the victim) 
of an automobile accident in Maddox 
park Sunday. The child was playing 
with other children and ran into the 
side of a car driven by Bill Kingston, 
1498 Mosley place. according to po-| 
lice reports. | 

Kingston took the child to Grady 
hospital where she was admitted, suf- 
fering from a possible fractured skull. 
No case had been made against 
Kingston Sunday night. 

Joel R. Berry Jr.. 10, of 684 Evans 
street, was treated at Grady hospital 
Sunday for a fractured § ankle, re- 
ceived when an automobile which was 
being cranked by Will Gay, negro.) 
rear 688 Evans street, started and) 
ran over the boy’s fooi. The car was 
in gear. Police made no case against 
the negro. 

Condition of E. D. Pettit, 56, of 
1563 Evans drive, S. W., who was. 
admitted Saturday night suffering 
from a head injury received in an 
automobile accident on L’ace’s Ferry. 
road, was still serious, it was said at 
Grady Sunday. 


Latest Vienna Bombing 


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? 


; 


| 
| 


Kills Catholic Priest 


VIENNA, June 24.—(#)—A C€ath- 
olic priest was killed and five per- 
sons were injured ax bombings con- 
tinued in many parts of Austria over | 
the week-end. | 

Father Franz Fiba: died today of | 
injuries suffered last night when a) 
bomb exploded near the vicarage door 


at Kupfenberg, in«Styria. 


i 
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EVANSVILLE, Ind., June 24.—(®)| Demand Morning Paper | 


; 


Daytona Beach Readers 


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., June 
24.—(UP)—With 80 per cent of 
its readers voting for the change, 
the Daytona Beach Sun-Record 
switched from afternoon to morn- 
ing publication today. : 

The Sun-Record is owned by R. | 
H. Gore, former governor of Porto 
Rieo. E. M. Rosenberger, formerly 
associated with the Norfolk Virgin- 
ian-Pilot and latterly with the Mi- 
ami Herald, is publisher; A. B. 
Kirk, business manager, and August 
Burghard, editor. 

The transfer from afternoon to 
morning is the second such shift in 
Florida within the past two years. 
The Fort Myers News-Press made 
a similar switch when its readers 
voted 4 to 1 in favor of a morning 


ee. 
he Sun-Record will receive the 
full leased wire report of the United 
Press. 


CUBANS 


CONSIDER 
BASIC RESHAPING. 
FOR GOVERNMENT 


Substitution of French 
for American Type of 


Republic Seen as Means 
To Curb Strife. 


o_o 


HAVANA, June 24.—(UP)—Cuba 
may abandon her present form of gov- 
ernment—a republic like the United 
States—and substitute for it a con- 
stitution on the French model, it was 
indicated tonight. : 

President Carlos Mendieta and 
General Mario Menocal discussed the 
proposal at a conference today Pro- 
ponents of the scheme argued it would 
render the government more flexible 
and tend to lessen -politieal strife 
which now “is ruining the nation.” 

If the plan is adopted the new con- 
stitution would provide for a presi- 
dent of the republic who would be 
more or less a figurehead as is the 
president of France. Real power 
would be vested in the president of 
the council of ministers which would 
come from the political party having 
a majority in.a chamber of deputies— 
or congress. 

As politicians sought some formula 
which would end terrorism sporadic 
violence continued. A bomb was ex- 
ploded in an areaway near Galiano 
and San Jose streets, damaging show 
windows of a number of companies, 
including the Westinghouse Electric 
Company. 

At Verado a group of unknown ma- 
rauders with machine guns broxe into 
radio station CMQ and kidnaped three 
speakers who were broadcasting at- 


Wedell Built Planes 
Which Set Many Records 


PATTERSON, La., June 24.—()— 
James R. “Jimmy” Wedell. 34, the 
New Orleans and Patterson world 
famous speed flier and airplane build- 
er, was killed late today in the crash- 
ing of a small Gypsy Moth English 
type airplane in which he was giv- 
ing instruction to a student flier. 
Frank Sneeringer, of Mobile, Ala. 

Wedell was killed instantly and the 
student was critically injured. Sneer- 
ingen was taken to St. Mary’s hospi- 
tal in Franklin. He was conscious 
when pulled from the wreckage of 
the plane, but lost consciousness upon 
reaching the hospital and was unable 
to tell what caused the crash. 

Wedell’s body was found in the 
cockpit of the plane. His head was 
lying against the instrument panel 
with his skull crushed and his body 
badly mangled. 

Wedell was the holder of the land 
plane speed record of 305.33 miles 
an hour, which he won on September 
4. 1933, at the international air races 
at Glenview. Tl. 

Colorful Career. 

' He held many other records in 
speed dashes and competitive events 
and had to his credi*’ errands of 
mercy. Outstanding among the latter 
was the flying of siz-month-old Sue 
Trammell, through wid, fog and 
snow, last December 26 from Houston, 
Texas, to Johns Hopkins hospital in 
Baltimore, a 1,400-mile trip laden with 
almost insurmountable difficulties. 

The child underwent an operation 
for water on the brain and recovered. 

Jimmy Wedell had two famous 
ships which he designed and built at 
the Wedell-Williams Air Service, Ince., 
at Patterson, which was backed by 
Harry Williams, wealthy lumberman 
who became interested in Wedel! 
while the flier was un a barnstorming 
cour in his early days. 

Williams, whose wife is the former 
Marguerite Clark, formerly of the 
films, backed Wedell to the limit and 
two famous planes were turned out, 
the “44” and the “92.” 


tacks on the ABC semi-fascist secret Wedell’s Records. 


/warship resumed loading 


political society. The attackers forced 
the three men to drink heavy doses 
of castor oil and then released them. 

Mutiny on the warship -Cuba, at 
Antilla, was believed settled with 


Among his claimed records with his 
high speed ships were these: Fifty 
minutes from Washington to New 
York in a speed dash set November 
“4, last: a five-hour, five-minute record 


arrival of troops from Santiago and 
the removal of Capiain Ulloa, com- 
mander of the vessel. Crew of the 
her with 
supplies, but no date was set tor her 
departure. 

The men mutinied in protest against 
orders of the new naval chief of staff, 
Commander Angel Gonzales. Gonzales 
was appointed Friday, replacing Com- 
mander Salvador Mendez  Villocha, 
who was retired suddenly without ex- 
planation. 


Germany and Britain 
Will Discuss Debts 


BERLIN, June 24.—!‘)--The Ger- 
man government has cabled to Lon- 


_don its acceptance of the Briiish in 
_vitation to discuss probiems arising/ today was his first in the air, of- 


ficials of the airport said. 


out of the reich’s morator.um debt 
payments, it was disciosei in official 
quarters today. 


| 
No information is at hand to indi-| persons at the airport of the Wedell- 


i 


‘lessons from 


| from New York to Miami, set Novem- 
'ber 19, last; the fastest trip ever 
'made from Hartford, Conn., to Roose- 
_velt Field. N. Y.. in 18 minutes, when 
_he averaged close to 300 miles per 
'hour; Los Angeles races last July, 
when he finished second, but was 
| awarded the Thompson trophy race 
| when Colonel Roscoe Turner was dis- 
| qualified for cutting a pylon. 

| Wedell was one of 16 crack fliers 
'of America who had entered the 
| $75.000 London-to-Melbourne, Aus- 
| tralia, race set for next October. 

| He did not build the small plane 
in which he was killed today. The 
gypsy moth fell from an_ altitude 
of about 300 feet. and because of the 
condition of the student fiver it had 


‘not been determined who was at the 


‘controls at the time. 

| Sneeringer had been at the Patter- 
son airport for 10 days taking ground 
Wedell, and his flight 


Crash Circumstances. 
The crash was witnessed by several 


cate that Germany's affirmative reply | Williams Corporation, of which We- 


has been received, an official spokes- 
man said. 

“We are anxious to come to some 
arrangement,” he said. 


| dell was vice president. 
‘son, factory manager of the company 


FE. J. Robert- 


-- 


| Continued in Page 2, Column 3. 


ATLANTA 


Fair 
‘armer 


W 


| The Weather 


GEORGIA 
Generally 
Fair 


Georgia—Generally fair Monday-< 
and Tuesday, except scattered after- 
noon thundershowers in south por- 
tion. 

Local Weather Report. 


Highest temperature 

Lowest temperature ... 

Mean temperature 

Normal temperature - 


'Rainfall in past 12 hours, ins... 


Excess since Ist of month. ins.. 
Def. since Jan. 1, 
Total rainfall since Jan. 1, ins..: - 


Dey temperature 
Wet bulb . 
Relative humidity 


“DOG-GONE” 

When you lose your dog, call 
WAlInut 6565 for an Ad-taker. 
An ad in the WANT AD PAGES 
of The Constitution will be of 


Augusta. 
«| Birmingham. 


(Sun- 
TO: 


>» ATLANTA—One year ago 
day, June 25): High, 87; low, 
cloudy. 


Reports of Weather Bureau Stations. 


STATIONS 
AND STATE OF 
WRATHER 
Atlanta. clear 
eee .-.. + «aaa 
part clidy.. 
Boston. clear ......see-. 
Reffalo. clear ... cee 
Charleston. clondr .... 
Charlotte. eldy. . 
pt. 
clear . 


| Temperature! Rain 

i i2hrs 

Ins. 

| of 
7 


| 7pm. | High 
r a 


' 


pt. 
Chattanooga. 
Chicago, 
Denver. part 

Galveston. clear 
Havre, cloudy 
Flelena. cloudy 
Jacksonville. 


great help to you in the recovery 
of a lost dog or other pet. 


RSLSESSSESSSEVSES 
SSSRSRESSESSS 


Vicksburg, -*eeeee - 
Washington, clear odeudd - P 


G. W. MINDLING 


| 


The Daily Constitution Leads in Home Delivered, City 


Total Circulation! 


|$23332222222 


“ 


A 


——s 


, trading Territory and 


Pee 


—S 


« ae 


—— 


PAGE 1 WU 


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JUNE 28, 1934. 


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cheancasl chy Nhe seen Ti Saar gee oe Se 2 Poe ae oe ae es tay 
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BLUFFING’ IS LAID 
10 NEW DEALERS 


Republican Leader Snell 
Makes Bitter Attack on 
Administration. 


WASHINGTON, June 24.—(4)— 
Representative Snell, house republi- 
can leader, asserted today the demo- 
cratic administration was “bluffing 
the public” and that its members were 
touring the country to spread political 
propaganda at the expense of tax- 
payers. 

In a statement issued through the 
republican senatorial-congressiona] 
committee, Snell also described Presi- 
dent Roosevelt's address at Yale Uni- 
versity last week as ai “political 
#peech.” 

Last week Secretary Morgenthau 
made public a letter to all officers 
and employes of the treasury depart- 
nent calling on them to resign from 
their government jobs or quit their 
political offices if they hold such 
dual positions, Snell said that in 


“actual practice this applies only to 
the little fellow.” He added: 

“If the administration meant what 
it says and is honest in its state- 
ments, why does it not rid itself of 
Postmaster-General Farley, who at 
one and the same tim: still continués 
to be -*airman of the democratic na- 
tional committee?” 

Snell asserted there “never had 
been such a politically minded outfit 
running the government in the memory 
of the oldest man.” . 

“The actual proof that this is the 
fact,” he said, “is that in all the 
emergency legislation demanded by 
the president, since the inception of 
his administration, employes have been 
specifically exempted from civil serv- 
ice requirements, Perhaps, as _ the 
president says, he may not know the 
political affiliations of all of ‘the men 
appointed to public office but Mr. 
Farley knows them. 

“Mr. Roosevelt seized upon the 
occasion of his being honored at Yale 
to make this political ‘speech. At 
the same time he sought to inject 
new life into the brain trust, claim- 
ing it as his own. 

“The flamboyantly bombastic Gen- 
eral Johnson finds it necessary to 
tour the nation to sell to the people 
the NRA. He undertakes this job, 
as do a multitude of other officials.” 
he said, naming Professor Tugwell, 
Chester Davis, AAA administrator; 
Leo T. Crowley, federal deposit in- 
surance comporation and Postmaster- 
General Farley. 


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| 


JIMMY WEDELL 
KILLED IN PLANE 


Continued From First Page. 


and one of the witnesses, said that 
before taking off Wedell had examin- 
ed the plane thoroughly. 


“He always looked over a ship be- 
fore flying,” Robertson said. “If it 
wasn't all right he would have it 
fixed up before leaving the field.” 

He said Wedell had flown the ship 
several times before and that fliers 
considered it one of the safest types 
of planes manufactured. 

Robertson said the gypsy moth 
took off smoothly from the port, head- 
ing southward into the wind. It be- 
gan to climb slowly, he said, and 
then about a mile south of the field 
suddenly headed downward. It lev- 
eled for abrief moment as Wedell ap- 
parently attempted to straighten out. 
Then it dived nose first to earth. 

“Jimmy crashed,” someone shouted. 

Crash in Rice Field. 

The fatal crash happened before the 
plane had attained its altitude. Rob- 
ertson and a score of ‘others leaped 
into automobiles and rushed in the 
direction in which the plane fell. The 
famous speéd flyer had crashed in a 
rice field. 

They found the plane had struck a 
small’ tree and then had buried its 
nose in several feet of mud and water. 
The plane was demolished, but did 
not burn. 

Wedell’s feet were canght in the 
wreckage of the cockpit floor and his 
shoes had to be joosened and his feet 
pulled ont of them. 

Wedell’s body was placed in a 
ambulance and taken back to the fl; 
ing field, while the iojured man was 
carried to the hospital in the auto- 
mobile of a physician. 

The flyer is survived by his widow. 
They resided in New Orleans. Im- 
mediately upon being informed of the 
accident, Harry P. Williams and his 
brother, Walter Williams, came here 
from New Orleans in a plane. 

Backed By Williams. 

Jimmy Wedell was once a kid flyer 
who turned into a record smashing 
speed plane builder and daring pilot 
whose early abilities in flying as a 
barnstormer of the southwest inter- 
ested the wealthy Wiiiiams as Jimmy 
on one occasion “stormed” through 
Patterson in one of the old-time 
planes. 


n 


ly a million dollars in the organiza- 
tion of the air corporation and said 
to Jimmy: 

“T’ll pay the bills. 
and do your stuff.” 

Williams believed he had found a 
native genius and felt that satisfac- 
tion that comes with good investment 
when his genius was officially timed 
in 305.33 at Glenview, Ill. 

Jimmy has been in many close 
places before, but in all of his tight 
spots with an airplane he has never 
received as much as a scratch except 
In one previous accident abont a year 
ago at Patterson, when he made a 
forced landing and was_ slightly 
shaken up. 

His only other major accident in 
all of his fantastic career was a boy- 
hood motorcycle accident which 
blinded him in one eye. 
Barnstorming Days. 

Wedell was a barnstormer of the 
early days of the airplane throughout 
the south. He stunted before fairs 


Now go ahead 


and entertained the crowds and has 
been left stranded in isolated forced 
landings time and again, but he al- 
ways pulled out and got there safely. 

He never reached high school, but 
had the brain of a genius in the line 
of airplanes. He learned alone how 
to fly, and managed to get in exactly 
one hour of flying instruction in his 
life from a teacher. 

His associates described him as a 
“miracle of aviation,” because he made 
an air eapital of Patterson, this little 
town of the Bayou Teche in the heart 
of the Evangeline country. It was a 
cypress lumber town of the old days. 

Jimmy was a native of Texas City, 
Texas, where his father was a bar- 
tender in pre-prohibition days. 

He went through the ninth grade 


and then quit books in order to tinker 


with gasoline engines. He set up a 
shed for a garage and began to fix 
broken-down “flivvers’ and motor- 


cycles. 
First a Box-Kite. 

In that decade all the talk was 
about what the Wright brothers, Wil- 
bur and Orville, had done with a “fly- 
ing machine” at Kitty Hawk, N. C., 
and Jimmy and his brother Walter 
built a box kite as their first airship 
and tried to float it out of the salt 
prairies, 

Jimmy had never seen an airplane. 
He heard of a crash of one of them 
near Houston, 50 miles north of Texas 
City. He had saved up S800 and he 


BND cUTs 


LB. 23C 


BEEF LIVER ... . 15¢ 


} 
} 


bought the damaged plane, a wrecked 


/O-X Standard with a six-cylinder mo- 
That was Jimmy’s first airplane, | 


tor. 
Then Jimmy joined with a_barn- 


_storming aviator named Francis Rust 


; 


| 


and Rust gave him the one hour of 
flying instruction. Rust died in a 
crash in a fog in 1931. 
TWO KILLED IN CRASH 

NEAR TRIZOLA, ILL. 


Williams backed him up with near- | 


men were killed today when 


plane crashed near Trizola, TIl., 


miles west of here, and burst. into 


| flames. 


| James Carl Ryan, 23, of Yates 
City, and Dr. Robert Thomas Plum- 
mer, 29, Trizola physician and student 
pilot, were the victims. 
Dr. Plummer was at 
(of the plane, owned jointhy 
| pair. 
-& spin and crashed. 


the controls 
by the 


—— oe 


| NEW DRY AMENDMENT 
IS URGED BY CANNON 


MOUNTAIN LAKE PARK, Md.. 
June 24.—(#)—Bishop Cannon Jr., of 
the Methodist Episcopal church, south, 
today led more than 4,000 people in 
urging congress to submit a new pro- 
hibition amendment. 


The proposed amendment to the 
constitution would empower congress 
to prohibit, or restrict, the sale of al- 
coholic liquors in the nation as a 
whole. 

“This will make national prohibi- 
_ tion of this national evil a clear cut 
| issue in the election of every con- 
'gressman and every senator until we 
_ have Again achieved 
| Bishop Cannon declared. 


ee 


(STOMACH SO 

BAD EVEN 

MILK WOULD 

PUT ME IN AGONY. 
FIRST DOSE OF #€- 
PLACIDAN 
BROUGHT MORE 
RELIEF THAN |! 
HAD IN YEARS 


Astoria, L. |. 


ET UP T00 SICK TO 
EAT YOUR BREAKFAST? 


| Maybe food doesn’t interest you much 
at any time. Maybe it sours your 
_stomach...nauseates you. Try 
| Placidan! You'll like it. Placidan, 
| with its four antacids... 
acidity and sweetens the stomach. 
| Nausea goes 
belching, too. At all drug stores. 


| Placidan “Stomach rete 


— a 


MADMAN SLAVS 
AND ELUDES POSS 


Village Idiot Runs Amuck 
at Wolcott, Conn., Then 
Flees Into Forest 


WOLCOTT, Conn., June 24.—(UP) 
John Crowe, 56, the village idiot, ran 
amuck today, killing two men and 
wounding a woman with his hunting 
rifle. . 

After pumping bullets into Clarence 
Yuskas, 22, and Julius Karauskas, 
45, and grazing the forehead of Mrs. 
John Yuskas, the youth’s mother, he 
fled to the woods and became object 
of a search by hundreds of police and 
armed farmers. 

State police, armed with machine 
guns and tear gas pistols, attacked a 
shack several hours later, believing 
they had the. demented recluse cor- 
nered. After riddling the walls with 


lead and firing a tear gas bomb, they 
advanced gingerly, only toe find the 
place empty. ns 

They spread a dragnet throughout 
the woods where Crowe, town charac- 
ter for a quarter of a century, had 
lived his eccentric life, subsisting large- 
ly on game shot with his rifle. 

An old automobile which Crowe had 
driven was found. In it were several 
sticks of dynamite. He was believed 


‘to have fled deep into the woods, 


} 
; 
' 
| 


PEORIA, Ill, June 24.—(®)—Two| yp. 


} 


} 
; 
; 
' 


| 
| 
| 
| 


' 
; 


At about 300 feet it went intO | the widow of former United 


i 


' 
} 


‘of Mr. 


prohibition,” | 


tomorrow night 


with which he was familiar, probably 
horrified at the consequences of his 
act. Apparently he made no attempt 
to molest anyone else after spraying 
lead in the Yuskis home. 

A neighbor telephoned to Water- 
bury police: “There's been a murder 
at Wolcott.” Four detectives rushed 
here immediately and when they learn- 
ed of Crowe's flight, telephoned for 
reinforcement. 

State police also were called and 
arrived in roadsters and on motorcy- 
cles from the nearby Beacon Falls 
barracks, led by Lieutenant William 
L. Shatzman. Lech constables, rous- 
ed from their Sunday afternoon naps, 
came panting to the scene. a0 

Within an hour a force of vigi- 
lantes, led by policemen, was being 
spread through the wooded hills. 


Dose of Poison Fatal 
To James Darlington 


James S. Darlingion, 53, of 1042 
Washita avenue, N. E., died at his 
home early Sunday afternoon from the 
effects of a poison dose which, ac- 
cording to police reports, was self- 
administered. 

According to a report by Patrolmen 
John Wood and M. B. Stroud they 
answered a call to the Washita resi- 
dence . nd found Darlington dead. The 
report says that Mrs. Darlington told 
them her husband had taken poison 
earlier in the day and had been un- 
der the care of a physician. He had 
been in ill health, having undergone 
an operation about two months ago. 
Worry over his health was ascribed 
by members of the family as the cause 
of his act. 

In addition to his wife, he is sur- 
vived by two adopted daughters, Mary 
and Martha Hightower. Funeral) ar- 
rangements will be announced later 
by H. M. Patterson and Son. 

W. D. Osborne, of 384 Pavillion 
street, S. E.. was admitted to Grady 
hespital Sunday night suffering from 
a self-administered dose of acid he 
took in a Georgia avenue pharmacy 
in the presence of witnesses. He ob- 
tained the acid by saying he wanted 
it to kill insects with. First aid was 
administered at the drugstore and he 
was sent to the hospital in an ambu- 
lance. 


Columbus Boy, 10, 
Is Killed by Auto 


COLUMBUS, Ga., June.24.—(/)— 
Nolan Daniel Elliott, 10, was fatally 
injured when he was struck by an 
automobile while he was walking along 
the highway near the city today. His 
half brother. Samford H. Elliott, 16, 
was seriously injured. The latter's 
brother, Mitson FE. Elliott, was pres- 
ent but escaped injuries. 

A negro, driver of the car, was ar- 
rested on a manslaughter charge. Five 
other negroes who were in the ma- 
chine were taken into custody. 


a 


ROOSEVELT ORDERS 
150 MILLION USED 
IN DROUTH RELIEF 


Continued From First Page. 


Roosevelt discussed with them in- 


their | formally the political situation, com- 


plicated so far as the democrats are 
concerned because of the recent de- 
feat of Tammany Hall in city elec- 
tions, 

It was understood that Postmaster 
General James A. Farley would be 
a Hyde Park visitor tomorrow. 

The president dispatched to Den- 
ver, Col., a message of condolence to 
States 
Senator Charles S. Thomas, who died 
this morning. Thomas was a friend 
Roosevelt. while both were 
in Washington during war 


Kept Indoors. 
_ A blazing sun kept Mr. Roosevelt 
indoors except for the brief church 
trip and a short motor ride in the 
early evening to the cottage, family 
rendezvous on the estate about three 
miles from the main house. 

Tomorrow Mr. Roosevelt plans to 
devote his entire day to government 
business which accumulated while he 
was attending. the Yale-Harvard boat 
races at New London, Conn. 

It was learned that in connection 
with the labor disputes situation he 
was keeping a close watch on develop- 
ments in the Pacific coast dock work- 
ers’ strike and felt confident that the 
matter would be settled. 

It was emphasized by White House 
associates. however, that he was leav- 
ing the efforts at conciliation strictly 
in the hands of the department of 
labor. 

The president will leave Hyde Park 
aboard his special 


serving 
days. 


‘train, due to reach Washington Tues- 


| were rescued. 


“= | day morning. 


e ‘MIDWEST STORMS 


CLAIM SIX LIVES; 
DAMAGE IS HEAVY 


Continued From First Page. 


The drownings cli- 
maxed a wedding anniversary party 
for Charles J. Tallet, Waukegan, and 
his wife. , 

The unidentified Chicagoan was 
drowned in Fox lake when he fell out 
of a boat. 

Kuhns and Thomas were drowned 
in Lake Michigan. They had gone 
yesterday in their 12-foot outboard 


; 
i 


... heartburn, gas, and | 


reduces the | motor boat to follow 


a 
yacht races to Michigan City. Ind., 
and their craft was caught in 
storm on the way back. 

Ayre was killed when a piece of 


‘timber struck him last night as the 


|} barn on his father’s farm, 20 


from Marshfield, collapsed. 


4 Desperadoes Escape, 
Kidnap Two Texans 


LUBBOCK. Texas, June 24.—()— 
Four desperadoes, one of them a killer 
and another suspected of murder, slug- 
ged their way out of jail here today, 
abducting a banker and justice of the 
peace and seizing guns as they fled. 
The hostages, Walter S. Posey, vice 
president of the First National Bank 
of Lubbock, and Campbell H. Elkins, 
an assistant justice of the peace, were 
released unharmed tonight at Big 
Spring, Texas, 75 miles away, after 
a. harrowing ride. 

The four escaped prisoners are Ed 
(Perch Mouth) Stanton, convicted 
murderer of a sheriff; Bill Doupe, 
convicted hijacker, suspected of mur- 
de:; Andrew Nelson, convicted 
burglar, and J. B. Stephens, convict- 
ed burglar. 


OO PCT. OF STEEL LABOR 
BALLOTS IN ELECTION 


NEW YORK, June 24.—(#)—The 
American Iron and Steel institute de- 
clared in a statement today that 90.12 
per cent of workers “eligible and 
available to vote” in eight major steel 
companies’ employe’ representation 
plans had cast ballots at final elec- 
tions, compared with approximately 
85 per cent at the primaries. 

The institute made public final fig- 
ures on the elections balloting, show- 
ing 193,362 workers participated out 
of a total of 214,561 eligibles. ' 
A district organizer for the Amal- 
gamated Association of Iron, Steel 
and Tin Workers was nominated as 
an employe representative in a plant 
of the United States Steel Corpora- 
tion, the institute said, but was de- 
feated in the elections. He was the 
only non-employe nominated in any 
steel corporation plant primary. 

The institute’s statement did not 
disclose the number of non-employe 
representatives elected, but said: 

“Even though some employe repre- 
sentation plans make no restrictions 
on the choice of employes as to their 
representatives, it is significant that 
in practically all cases employes only 
were placed for nomination tor em- 
ploye representatives.” 
The institute termed the election 
figures a confirmation of “the posi- 
tion of the steel industry that etrike 
talk by union leaders was not sup- 
ported by the vast majority of em- 
ployes.” 
The companies’ elections on which 
the institute showed final figures 
were: 


Ballots 
Cast. 
119,049 

12,544 
26,448 
15,665 

1,970 
6,528 
4,274 
6,889 


Employes 
Eligible. 
T. S. Steel Corp 132,840 
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co 14,506 


Republic Steel Corp 28, 859 


Jones & Laugblin Steel Corp. 15,740 
Sharon Steel Hoop C 

Wheeling &teel Corp 

Pittsburgh Steel Co 

Inland Steel Co 


Bullitt Escapes Unhurt 
In Russian Air Crash 


HYDE PARK, N. Y.. June 24.— 
(UP)—A cablegram informing him 
that William C. Bullitt, American an- 
bassador to the soviet union, was in a 
plane crash at Leningrad but escaped 
unscratched was received by President 
Roosevelt today at the summer White 
House. 

“Plane landed upside down but 

we emerged right side up,” Bullitt 
messaged. ‘Trust none has reported 
to you that we are dead. Both un- 
scratchéd. Good luck for your trip.” 
“Bullitt.” 
The ambassador, who has _ been 
making an air tour of Russia, did not 
give the name of the person with him, 
presumably the pilot. 


WIFE OF RYAN HEIR 
FLIES INTO RAGE 
AGAINST “SLEUTHS” 


PARIS, June 24.— (UP) — The 
Countess Marie-Anne Von 
brand-Stuppach, estranged wife o 
Clendenin Ryan Jr., New York multi- 
millionaire, flew into a rage today 
when she found what appeared to be 
a pair of detectives on her train. 

Aboard the liner Europa, the beau- 
tiful young countess protested that 
her husband, heir to the traction mil- 
lions of the late Thomas Fortune 
Ryan, had set five detectives to watch 
her. On alightning at Cherbourg, she 
was relieved to discover no one appur- 
entiy following her. 

However. today she saw two men 
with peculiar mustaches dogging her 
footsteps—and the tantrum followed. 

Ryan is suing for an annulment of 
his marriage. He is a secretary to 
Mayor LaGuardia. In his suit he 
contends the countess married him for 


PILOT, CAMERAMAN. 


his money, misrepresenting the wealth 
of her family and had prior affairs | 
with other men. She entered a gen- | 
eral denial. 


BRIEF ILLNESS FATAL 
TO MISS LEVERETT 


Miss Virginia Leverett, 23-year-old | 
post-graduate nurse, died early Sun- | 
day night at an Atlanta hospital after 
a short illness. She resided at 404) 
Sycamore drive, Decatur. 

Surviving are her mother, Mrs. 
Elma Hardeman, of Decatur. and a) 
brother, Dan Hardeman. The body | 
will be taken at 4 o’clock this after-. 
noon to Birmingham, Ala., for funeral | 
services and interment. A. S. Tur-) 
ner is in charge. 


| prepares food for your stomach, so the 


' out the intestines to give a “full,”’ more 


‘mint empties and cleanses the bowels of 
| putrid waste. 


| constipation. 1l5c and 25c at druggists. 


KILLED IN CRASH 


Continued From First Page. 


monoplane zooming up at him, scarce- 
ly 100 feet away. He banked sharply, 
but not enough, and their wings 
crashed against each other. 

The monoplane, twisting and turn- 
ing in crazy flight, drfited 3,000 feet 
to crash against a hillside. Before 
it struck, McMullen and Oakes either 
wore thrown clear of tire caip or at- 
tempted to climb outside with the 
iden of. jumping when ‘t aearefi the 
ground. ‘They fell int» a field and 
were killed instantly. 

The national guard plane was 
buried in the soft earth. of the air- 
port, only its undercarriage and wings 
showing. The other plane also was 
wrecked. Neither took fire. 

About 15,000 persocs, gathered to 
watch the dedication of the airport, 
which was held in connection with che 
convention of the National Yankee Di- 
vision Veterans’ Association, saw the 
crash. 

McMullen and Oakes were mapping 
the new Green Mountain highway 
project for the national parkway scrv- 
ice, department of interior. 


McMULLEN AND OAKES SPENT 
SEVERAL WEEKS IN ATLANTA 

William H. McMullen and Raymond 
Oakes were widely known at Candler 
field, where they spent several weeks 
in January and February on an aerial 
photographie survey job for the pub- 
lic works administration. 

They surveyed an expanse 1,500 
square miles in extent on which home- 
stead projects are to be launched with 
federal funds. Using the Atlanta air- 
port as a base, their work carried 
them over Jasper, Jones, Putnam and 
Morgan counties. The two left At- 
lanta several months ago for other 
survey assignments in the middle west 
and east. 

MeMullen was a nationally known 

pilot with vast experience in the air. 
He learned to fly soon after the Unit- 
ed States became a participant in 
the World War and first flew an 
aerial survey with the army air corps 
at Fllington field, Houston, Texas, in 
1918. Early in 1919 he joined the 
Curtiss Aeroplane Company at Min- 
eola, N. Y., and spent several years 
with that company in photographic 
work. He then spent three years in 
South America as representative of 
the Curtiss Export Corporation, dem- 
onstrating and selling planes in Peru, 
Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay 
and Brazil. He returned to the states 
a few vears ago and became affiliated 
with Aerial Explorations, Inc., the 
company with which he was connected 
at thé time of his death. 
Oakes was with the United States 
army air corps from 1922 until 1925 
and spent much of that period as 
aerial photographic instructor at Cha- 
nute field. Illinois. Since 1925 he had 
been in the commercial aerial pho- 
tographic field, having manor large 
areas in Central America, Cuba, Can- 
ada, Mexico and most of the states 
in the union. 

MeMullen and Oakes were here in 
a Bellanca monoplane, the same ship 
which carried them to their death 
Sunday. 


TENNESSEE NEGRO 
SLAIN BY EIGHT MEN 


MANCHESTER, Tenn., June 24.— 
(P)\—A 35-year-old negro was shot and 
killed and his body mutilated by a 
band of white men near here early to- 
day, and officers reported the act oc- 
curred after the men had visited a 
negro dance where the negro struck 
one of them. Eight men were held to- 
night charged with the murder. 


cy 


WHITE LEGHORN : 
EXTRA FANCY, ALL SIZE 


Fryers = 25¢ 


We offer again today the same 
quality of eggs that we sold 
Saturday at the same price. 


STRICTLY FRESH 


Eggs >= 16'/2¢ 


Try and buy them wholesale 
at this price—It can’t 
be done. 


THIS LAXATIVE 


Cleanses Completely | 


.-. 00 bowel abuse 


Cleanse bowels of waste matter more 
thoroughly, morecompletely with delicious 
Feen-a-mint, the chewing gum laxative, 
and you'll get quicker, surer relief from 
dizziness, headache and other constipa- 
tion ills. Feen-a-mint acts more thorough- 
ly because you chew it. Just as chewing 


chewing of Feen-a-mint distributes its 
laxative ingredient uniformly through- 


natural movement. us, Feen-a-mint 
never shocks the system nor abuses the 
bowels. Doctors themselves prescribe 
the laxative ingredient used in Feen-a- 
mint: Completely, thoroughly, Feen-a- 


As headache and dizzi- 
ness go, you feel more active, energetic, 
fresh. Feen-a-mint contains no richness 


Stab Wound in Heart 


Is Sewed by Surgeon 

LANCASTER, Pa,, June 24.— 
(/)—George Hampton, 41, with a 
stab wound in the heart, is alive 
and “doing as well as can be ex- 
pected.” ‘ 

In an operation which hospital 
officials say has seldom ixen per- 
formed except by professors of 
surgery, Dr. John L. Atlee Jr., 30- 
year-old surgeon, lifted Hampton's 
heart from its place and, with twv 
stitches, closed the wound io the 
left auricle. 

Attendants said Hampton was so 
near death when brought to the hos- 
pital Saturday night that his pulse 
was imperceptible. 

Mrs. Myztl> Dorwart, 36, Hamp 
ton’s housekeeper, is in jail, charg- 
ed with the stabbing. 


MISSING MINISTER, 
MOURNED FOR DEAD, 
IS FOUND ON FARM 


HALIFAX, N. S., June 24.—(/)— 
The Rev. G. R. T. Ayling, Baptist 
preacher who has been missing and 
was believed to have drowned in the 
Ishgonish river May 4, has been found 
by police on a farm near Moncton, 
working as a farm hand under an as- 
sumed name. 

The Royal Canadian mounted po- 
lice headquarters confirmed tonight 
that Rev. Ayling had admitted his 
identity after first giving his name to 
police as Charlie Hartlen. 

In the village of Debert he had 
been mourned since the day his camp 
was found on the river bank, his car 
with the ignition still on standing in 
the highway near-by and a pair of 
trousers identified as his, floating in 
the river, 

Search parties dragged the river 
and finally abandoned the search. On 
June 14 Baptists of his district gath- 
ered for a memorial service. 

Why he had allowed his name to be 
listed among the dead was not imme- 
diately explained. 

7 


Strike Voted. 
PUTNAM, Conn., June 24.—()— 
A general strike by July 5 among em- 
ployes in the cotton silk and rayor 


NAVY MEET DELA 
URGED HUBBAR 


Time Not Ripe for 1935 
Parley, He Asserts in 
Discussing Situation. 


(Copyright, 1934, by United Press.) 

WASHINGTON, Jnne 24.—(UP) 
Postponement of the 1935 naval con- 
ference until world couditions are 
favorable for agreement was advyo- 
cated today by Nathaniel M. Hob- 
bard, retiring president of the navy 
league. 


British and Japanese demands for 
bigger navies and foreshadowed de- 
mands that soviet Russix and Ger- 
many be called to the conference were 
cited by Hubbard as making the out- 
look dark for its success. 


An American nava! mission is in 
London now holding preliminary talks 
with Great Britain. Japan, France 
and Italy, the other ranking naval! 
powers, are involved in the scheduled 
parley, which diplomats consider cru- 
cial in the balance between peace and 
war in the next decaiie. 

“Neither political nor economic 
conditions at present favor holding of 
the 1935 conference.’ Hubbard told 
the United Press. 

“The objectives of every nara! 
power except the United States are 
for an increase rather than a de- 
crease of their national naval de- 
fenses. In the interest of both world 
peace and future additional] limita- 
tions of naval armaments it is hoped 
that these preliminary conversations 
may develop a situation that will in- 
duce the naval powers to effect an 
adjournment of the 1935 conference 
to a more propitious time, meantime 
maintaining the status quo under the 
Washington and London treaties.” 


industries in Connecticut was voted 
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: Se 3 THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934: Be eee ee _ PAGE THREE 

Permits Said Abused, Cravey Bare (ASCIENEy WeaMgae Poe Fak Rites (Baa rg [eta area ar eae 
All Collecting of Birds in Georgia\ENp or LONG SPAN| In Cities of France| the Nadio Waves AY || WEST POINT, Ga June 24-—| Le Davideon, West Foint 

widow of the late Columbus A. Shea- 


: Facggerg services = —— at o 
. ome of her daughter, Mrs. 

Misuse of collecting permits has led| being killed in this stale every year. ISTANBUL, June 24.—(#)—Zaro| PARIS, June 24.—()—The ugly rt i/ley, of Chambers county, died at. the 

Game and Fish Commissioner Zack D.| T'w«re are not more than a dozen or} Agha, the super-centenarian on this} temper of French crowds, a menace to me of her daughter, Mrs. A. CG 


arene, Monday morning at 10 :30 
o'clock. 

Cravey to order the suspension of al! | 15 réal problems of scientifie ornithol- | earth, seemed to be nearing the end of | authorities since the nation’s political 336.9 WGST : nati 405.2 WSB 740 Booker, here early Sunday morning. 
ecieutific collecting in Georgia so far| oxy in Georgia that need to be attack-| the long trail today. passions were unleashed on the his- Meters Kilocycles Meters Kilocycles | Mrs. ‘Shealey, whe had sade- her a 

nz the bird life of the state is con | ed by collecting methods. The balance He was back in the Children’s hos-) i ‘ ninhed home with her daughter Mrs. 5. 8 } | ne 4 
cerucd, it was learned Sunday. Un | of the work should be confined to ob-| pital, from which he had been dis-| 'one night. of Feweasy +. 1eaee 6:00 A. M.—Lew Childre, the boy from| 6:55 A. M.—Another day Tindall, Atlanta, for the past several | 
der these permits a collector is em. | servations on the living birds. charged several weeks ago, and physi-| police with an exciting week-end in} " Alabama. with Bob and Joe, the| 7:00—Breakfast Club orchestra, NBC. years, was stricken last week. Mem- . 4 poorly functioni Kidneys an: 


sowered to take any number of spe- “We have asked taat those who de-| cians said his condition is grave. | half-a-dozen cities. Lone Star Cowboys. 8:00—Harvest of Song. NBC. + , ni der make you sufter from Gettin 
“d cit 6:30—Musical Sundial. 8:15—Clara, Lu and 'Em, gossip, NBC. bers of her family at West Point went Up Nights, Nervousness, Rheumat: 
Cc. ; 


cizuens of the birds of the state, with-| sire collecting permita in futnre, at A senile decline has diminished| ‘The gravest disorders were in Lo-| 2°: or : t tlanta ‘oug : : 
out. regard for their rariiy or value.| the expiration of this 12-month ban,| Agha’s vitality, it was reported. At-) rient Saturday night. where 100 were 7 ab Seetoonetiten Parade. CBS. rat al peel nig Mate NRC. me ae, Se eee oe to the | Ke _ rer poy cenasting, 
In crder to stop the useless killing of | fiie with the game and fish depart- tendants said frequently he does not! injured in a violent clash with mount-| 8:15—Christian Council. 9:00—U. 8. Navy band, NBC. She was . member of the First | Doster al eoneriatien saiae: (ian tan) 
hundreds of birds each year, this sus-| ment a statement of the exact prob-| recognize friends, or his 73-year-old| eq horsemen. Communists, after lis-| 8:30—Press Radio News and The Be es on Baptist chureb, West Point. She ro Must Sx up or money 
pension of activity has been ordered| ler they wish to attack, the number} daughter. _ |tening to a political speech, barri- Constitution Broadcast. ib $8. Femememenae 5 GES survived by her five daughters Mrs Cystex back. Only 75c at druggists 
for a period of 12 months, effective | of specimens they desire of given spe- A careful check to determine Agha's| caded themselves behind a stone wall $:35—The Merrymakers, UBS. ¢ St. John 10:30—Vie and Sade, sketch. NBC. si ; : 
July 1, 1934. cies, their connection with an imsti-| exact age, thought to be well over the| and resisted repeated charges with a 8:45-—National Cone Knights 0 : ‘ Ef tl a and ~ raga NBC. 
“It is not the purpose of this or-| tution of recognized standing, and century mark, was deferred because barrage of bottles, paving blocks and 9:00—One-quarter Hour in One-quarter sata ee pf Pnmvaee eed Archie. NBC. m . 
These Prices Effective Today and Tuesday 


der,” said Commissioner Cravey. “to| their scientific qualifications which) of his illness. The old man was much | sticks. . ‘Bee — - 11:30—Farm and Home hour, NBC. 
stop all scientifie work in ornitholugy{ will entitle them to possess such aj disturbed by doubts he is as old as he| §& 7 ; , - vere Se van. Sosge- 12:30 P. M.—Chick Wilson. 


in Geergia. Those famuiar with the | permit. claims to be. looted and trees uprooted during the! 9:45—Columbia Personalities. 1:00—Radio Guild, NBC 


situation know that there is no real| “Entitciy too many collectors have fighting. Firemen, who finally dis-|10:00—The Old Philosopher. »-00—News 
necessity for the taking of more than| the pertission of the federal govern-| 72 fedetaul evllecting permits outstand- persed the crowds by turning hoses on | 10:15—News. 2:15—Ozark Mountaineers. 
twy or three per cent of (he specimens | ment to coiiect in Georgia. There are| ing in this state. Suppose we discov-| them, were trampled in the fray. 10:00-c Esther Velas ensemble, CBS. 2:30--Orlando’s orchestra... NBC. 
ne ae ered that there were a good many ivory- Thirty were arrested. Today com- 11:00— Velazoo and his orchestra, CBS. tas lly te de cer Pg 
billed woodpeckers in the Okefenokee! munists returned the hand of one of 2 ha tate Ale apg ee nee 3:30—Calico Kiks, harmony trio. | | 
swamp, for example, If this neWS|ipe mounted guards, torn off with a| >. Ann Leaf at the organ. . 4:00—Charlie Davis’ orchestra, NBC. | 


| 12:30 P. M.—Chiropractic clinic. 4:15—U. 8. Army band, NBC. 


recta 
leaked out the birds undoubtedly . . . 4 
’ : *|sabre slash during the fighting. 12:40—Emery Deutsch's orchestra, CBS. ; ane 
would be exterminated by this horde | = a sd 1:00—Oahu  serenaders. , te ef pn EE pel age : QUALITY Fooo SHOPS 
of collectors before we ceuld take the. 7 @ 1:15—Rhythm Kings, CBS. 5:00—Gould and Sheffter. NBC. 
3 Die in Crash. 1:30—Poetic strings, CBS. 5:15-—Emil Coleman's orchestra, NBC. Fram Si ot at EO 


necessary steps for their protection. | »:00—1 ! 
" . , : - mahee " ‘ » fs azy Bill Huggins, CBS. or New 
Even at the expiration of the ban, we! ZANESVILLE, Ohio, June 24.—J| 2:15—Salvation Army staff band. CBS. + ae ial aaa 


nT TAKE CHAN CES will danas po. pecmibte. <2 Sake spect: | (> S0eS eet et ne ee 6:00—Br 
Ss! erm : /P : ; =: ’ : enau College program. ° 
as : 3:00—The Dictators, CBS. 5:15—Bi > NBC. f U 
DON | meus of rare birds. today when an automobile careened 3:30—Baseball game—Atlanta vs. Little be gyn aan orchestra, NBC Kill hose Insects!— sé 


“Violators of this order who are; off the Newark-Zanesville road and Rock 7:00—Sinclaic minstrels 


{ | apprehended .after the first of Julw| struck a tree. The victims were:| 5:45—Wannie Heston and his orchestra. 7:30—Donald Novis, tenor, NBO, 
U e w:'l be turned over t* tbe federal! Marshall M. Holmes, 35: his wife, Se eee en 8:00—Contented program, NBC. 
siete: few vicinal e praraives | OR . . :30— . OBS. 8:30—Perry Bechtel’s orchestra. 
courts for violation of the pi'graivry | Belva, 28: and his brother, Harold, 7:00—Rosa Ponselle with Andre Koste- ae: Se Andy, NBC. a Cc a S 


—— ee eee 


burt! ps : 9:00—Amos 'n’ 
bird treaty act.” | 28, all of Newark. : lantz’ orchestra and chorus, CBS. 9:18 Gene and Glenn. sketch, NBO, 
7:30—Billy Hays’ orchestra, CBS. ¥:30—Press radio news, NBC. 


8:00—Lee Steele, tenor, 9:35—Cousin Paul and His Boys. 


8:15—George Berkey’s orchestra, CBS. 9:45—Cecil White’s Samoans. MS C T C Dp e 
SINCLAIR 8:30—Mary Eastman, CBS. 10:01—Music contest. E | | 
9:00—Fats Waller, CBS. NBC, 


, a 
For 7 years we ve used it : : 10:15—Don Bestor'’s orchestra, 
| sivel at First Aid H e 9:15—Press Radio News and The 10:30—Virginie, Ruth _ Bilis, violinist. ae 
- ’ 4 . °40— o ‘ ‘ c t ‘ N e | . . 
exciu rf Constitution Broadcast. 1 0bs-Tertues Gardens sacanenes? NEC. 4 Pint Cc Pint Cc 
| Can 


‘ 0:20—Glen Gray’s Case Loma orchestra, - 
$5 pax: IBS. ‘ 11:30—Congress Hotel orchestra, NBC. 
Hospitals at Coney Island GASOLINE 4 Tat Seeger 13.00 Blas oft. Can 
10:00—Leon Belasco’s orchestra, CBS. 


says John McMonigle WHAT GASOLINE F 2 i 10:30—Old South dancing party. VOTERS IN FLORIDA 


| 11:00—*Rroadway melody. 


ON'T suffer pain needlessly! ak | 3 . | 12:00—Sign off. GO TO POLLS TUESDAY 

AY Noxzema brings instant relief a HAS 99 MILLION we Fatt By the Associated Prev Black Flag Sprayers Each 25c 
“ i eR ng. ) as FOOT-POUNDS ' * % % 2 Shri 1370 Florida’s electorate Tuesday com- 
to hot scorche : <i ees Ss f pe W } I L Kil pletes the task of nominating one 


used at most First Aid Hospitals— ee PER GALLON ? me -" Mosque ocycles || United States senator and two rail-|f : 

at Coney Island, Atlantic City, BN Se & : . }/road Commissioners—aside from nu- : i n O i r “4 a r k e t 5S 

Miami, etc. Le m a 7:00—Devotional period. merous state senators and representa- | 

Greaseless, too—will not stain pe ea 6: owes 7:15—Breakfast Club. tives, and various county officers— 
: ; sae ae :10-—Spanish. in the second democratic primary. 


You can apply Noxzema notonly at 7” ~~ ae | et oN re eS. : :10—Sociology. “nga . a 

ot but dting the day. too. ies | Li ) 4 Joop hays Nomination at this time is tanta- VEAL OR LAMB 
thi dai reaseless It << oa Se Re TS bg ee :30—Drama class. mount to election. 

snow-white, dainty, g . :% Co Shy : Be ‘(0O—Popular recordings. Interest continued to center about 


won't stain street clothes or bed | ; O33 : hs :10—Economic problems. | gh ein . 
) e sar of N itnies i : RRS : ae ‘10 P. M.—History and Appreciation of the senatorial race, involving Claude we 
clothes. Get a jar of Noxzema today ae me # Res: : 5 Ss Music. Pepper, 34-year-old Tallahassee attor- | Cc 
at any drug or department store. eh) bs | gk 4 is : Bs 2:30—Atlanta Chiropractic Clinic. ney, and United States Senator Park | a i LB. 
eh 4 ae vn , oe Ee en, eae: Trammell, Lakeland, who seeks his | 


:45—Noonday harmonies, 
0—Noonday variety. fourth term. 


:30—Feature vocal. Both candidates, hurling charges 


‘45— Mountain music. and counter charges, have waged in-| SOUTHERN MANSION BACON 1B. 29c 


: <S Og ae S 4 | 2:00—Dance orchestra. : oe | 

esis Ta i Ma ESS Ne Ra os ”:15—-Concert hour. tensive itineraries with six to 10) 
») Ox Zz a VY. 7 .\ Dc e a RS o. Bi Sth 3 oe Ss Renee SE pave 2: 45-—Feature dance orchestra, scheduled addresses daily since the FRESH BEEF LIVER LB. iSc 
MEE Ss Sine, See Re oe Se a 17c 


‘0—Luther Nuckools. first primary, June 5, in which they 
SO COOL — SO SOOTHING. FRESH GROUND BEEF LB. 


i tS = — et rs tors 


:15—Dance orchestra. : 
. tet gay sxe won the. right to enter the seeond 


30— Fa 1 : . : ; 
43-Stedie. caapees primary over three other candidates. SLICED PIMENTO HAM 15c 


‘O0—Jimmy Holmes. 


:15—Citizens’ Forum talk. MISS IDA COPPINGER, ° | SLICED BOLOGNA ° 20c 


Major Key. 


00O—WJTL Supper Club with Singing 
| Chef. : RAIL EMPLOYE, DIES 
| 6:00—Merchante’ variety, Mies Tén Moreland” Qappinger, , 

6:15—Studio. about 74, who had been connected | Duke S Duke S 


‘30—Two Cabelleros. . . - 
FR ni ge agg egy RO with the Southern railway for 17) 


:15—Southland’s variety. years, died Sunday morning at her 


. : > . £ t 

oe Rose. residence at 800 Juniper street. N. E. 

‘ies aan Night Dentist. Miss Coppinger had been ill since e is 0 r e is or 
‘00—Florence Radio "Painers. January. She was a native of Wash- | 


9:00—Marie Kate Smith. ington, D. C., where she resided prior | 
9:15-—In City Streets. to coming to Atlanta in 1928. She| 


a * 
0:30—Night Court. ’ 
Sickie tame. attended the Church of the Incarna- 
:30—Studio. tion in West End. The body will be 


‘0—Sleepy Town Express. . y j 4 
2:00—Sign off. taken to Washington today by Bran 


ee yh en 

Cima oc ”8|0C CC Ce 1 1° sor Dc 
Mrs. Mary Goudelock |——"—~ JAR JAR 
Is Reported Improved Half Soles 


Mrs. Mary Goudelock, seriously 


| 

? 8 LB. 15 
wounded Saturday by John A. Blount, EXTRA 4 ae Tellam $ Peanut utter JAR c 
S6-year-old Confederate veteran, who | LB. 
then committed suicide, was reported VALUE ees | Tasty Flake Soda Crackers BOX 10¢ 
improving Sunday at the Piedmont 


| | “£39 > 
hospital, as funeral arrangements for Shoes Dyed White Shoes | Swift $ Premium Oleo - 3 LBS. 25¢ 


| — were —— 5 le Any Color Redyed White 
hey ites ae the 

ean tae mata, Mel | Quaker Puffed Wheat. mo. to 
at IL o'clock this morning at _ the United Shoe Repairers ; bic 

chapel of the J. Austin Dillon Com- | Quaker Puff d Ri ? PKGS. 25e 


| pany. with the Rev. John Yost of- Opposite 
'ficiating. Burial will be in the Na- 109 Peachtree St. Pieamont Hotel | n emima ri 5 ¢ 
tional cemetery, at Marietta, Ga., and | A t J G t 2 BOXES 15 
the Alfred A. Colquitt chapter of the _ | u 
United Daughters of the Confederacy | - ? ] 
_will have charge of the services. Ou a k e r G ri ts . s BOXES 5e 
| Blount, while apparently insane, 


| shot: Mra. Goudelecs, intendent | e809 F.7-F 10¢ 
lof the oR er gg nen gen tor - the : Brill $ “4.” réeéz s PKG. 


once in 


tere tursiog thepistol "on himelt| f AMO MEAS | JDP Scholls Royal Chocolate Pudding . 2 rxcs. 18¢ 


Were nw HK 


‘with fatal results just as police were REMOVES 


arriving t st him. He had been, . | 
2 kenldink oh the Some tor five years. CORNS Zino pads Temple Garden Mustard QUART JAR 15¢ 


Hospital attaches at Piedmont said | 


Mrs. Goudelock had sl! ell Satur- | a ~ | 
| aad ine ae haere Bhs « Mingo we TAKE HOME A eee 2 y Libby $ Veal Loaf + 2 CANS 25c 


|/provement. Her wound is not consid- | 


or aay ee | 12 d | 0 Oli 23-07. JARS 25 
Christ Only ‘Fuehrer’ ACK-DRAUC —esase na “is PKG. 5 


AND COMM ERCIAL CARS Says German Bishop PURELY VEGETABLE LaxaTive | Holsum Spaghetti —. nce. ~=— SC 
| Yermont Maid Syrup . sortie 19¢ 


| BERLIN, June 24:—(4)—Bishop | 

Nicholas Bares today exhorted 75,000 | | ? 
German Catholics at a huge open-air) ¢ | ‘ ) Ss « | | 4 . h ? 25 
|convention to regard Christ as their) | Libby S or to e y Ss pinac NO. 2 CANS C 


only “fuehrer,” (leader, a popular} WHITE PETROLEUM JEL LY 


ene for Chaneellor Adolf Hit-; - ds OR ERE. at Sun-Maid Raisins e e BOX 10¢ 


These revised prices on the New Ford V-8 pcos rhe public admonition by the Le a 
visho» drew sharply to the attention |) TRRGs ies gecmmmeess a S$ | Gl § h ? 5 
BODY TYPE NEW lt of the vation the increasing tension) Haaeaea, ae es | ta ey $ oss tare s ® PKGS. C 


Trucks and Commercial Cars bring them to PRICE between the reich and the church. 


new low levels for 1934. This is a genuine His advice was given on the eve of | Mia me | Staley’s Cream Corn Starch = = xc. 100 


| : 112-INCH WHEELBASE fm pg phn 

price reduction fe oe not merely a drop from Commercial Car Chassis $350 interior, which tomorrow will gre ay 

ss 7 study of reasons fur the failure of the | 

a previous price increase, Sedan Delivery $565 concordat signed at Rome a year ago | 
“ . to adjust relations between church and | ; : ; . 

Pickup, Closed Cab $460 “state. NO DUST—NO HEAT : Asst. Varieties Quick or Reg. 


Panel Delivery, Standard $550 (2 GRIFFINITES ROBBED | Overnight J e ir gens’ Q u a k e i 


than the Ford \-8. Panel Delivery, De Luxe $565 | DURING VISITS TO CITY | 


. ~ It was a bad night Saturday for | 
It is the ONLY truck in America that ives you Station Wagon $650 ‘two persons from Griffin who visited) # NEW YORK | 
: tes ‘ 4 é 13114-INCH WHEELBASE | Atlanta by bus, it was net raps ae Round Trip $86.83 | Oap 
- " ° = ‘day morning in reporis made to police | | 
V-8 performance with PROVED four-cylinder WASHINGTON 


'by two men who were robbed at dif- | 


od coming to Atlanta and that they 
Closed Cab Stake Truck $650 caught a taxi together to seek 4 Round Trip $54.23 


It is the ONLY truck in America that gives you Rede 
2 pietawse . , / vight’s lodging. After alighting from | 
Closed Cab Platform cn exalt uae Leckia eee he aan * 


a low-cost engine exchange plan which cuts ee coimieaiaris caaenenned cer caliente a 
ae ee Truck the uaknews companion attacked his] Bet pours fo FRUITS*VEGETABLES 
repair bills almost in half! Cloeed Cab Heavy-Duty | ‘pen, silver cigaret case, and $12 in| NEW ORLEANS 


| cash. 
Express | Vennard Brannon told pole he Round Trip $47.19 Ec * v d 
; " é , im: ; ; ‘came to Atlanta on a bus and was) | r 
It is the ONLY truck in America that combines a | cane seo he bee tatmical foc ant Ee tenkealadandta 6 7 
: ‘other, when a stranger secosted him) @ pal points of the southeast without 


all these advantages with such money-saving De Luxe Panel Delivery and suggested they go down the street | loss of business time. 20,000,000 miles | Cc 
| . for a cup of coffee. Hé accepted the | of flying experience. All multi-mo- | orn EARS 


features as full-floating rear axle with straddle- Closed Cab Hvdraulic invitation and on Forsyth street was | tored, radio-equipped planes. 


shoved into an unlighted doorway and | 
Dump | relieved of all the money he had | @ Reservations at hotels, travel 
—$2.75. bureaus, any telegraph office or call 


Dump Track Chassis | ae Fresh Georgia Cabbage m= Te 


| ~ 


We Redeem Staley’s Starch Coupons 


No truck in America sells for a lower price 


mounted pinion, full torque tube drive and 


valve seat inserts. 


(Including Front Bumper) WEST, ARKWRIGHT PLAN | ; Cali ; 
He alifornia Carrots === $¢ 
V-8 TRUCK IS NOW MORE THAN EVER Chassis and Preston S. Arkwright, president Candler Field Calhoun 3131 
White or Yellow Onions 2 == $e 
this year, are slated to hold a confer- 
Panel Delivery $850 will fall due July 1, and they must Now medical authcrities agree Iron is the 
(ges the system of backed-up poison waste 


AT THESE NEW LOW PRICES, THE NEW FORD 157-INCH WHEELBASE CONFERENCE ON BONDS 
AMERICA’S GREAT TRUCK VALUE. Your Ford Gachuding Front Bamper) Solomon oft commetties of cltint 
Closed Cab Platform Truck $670 sade cedid: heen oan. | | R O N Fresh. Green 
He will arrange to give you an “on-the-job” _ be absorbed if Atlanta is to continue | neart of strength building hemoglobin in the LB = 
Dual Rear Wheels and Tires ... . $20 Pe Aer gee ath eo pnb owed station thet iatalligeatiy,, thereuahls clean- O e Ca ns 


B. Graham West, city comptroller, Airlines Ticket Office Walnut 6040 F re sh 3 e e ts i i BUNCH 5c : 
chairman of : 6 ae ‘ 
i E Cab named to» refund about ‘ | 
dealer has the New Ford y -8 Trucks and Closed Stake Truck $715 worth of city of Atianta bonds due Weak BLOOD Needs | 
Commercial Cars on display. Phone him. Ronda amounting ty abvut $262,000 | 
test with your own loads, orer your own federal officials to insure continuance | 


All Prices F. O. BR. Detroit of federal relief expendi:ures. West | and then adds Iron which your weak. ‘aging’ | 
| said that no difficalty is expected in tissues thirst for and which builds up blood. | 


routes, with your own driver at the wheel. the refunding. ‘Take Spicers Nux Herbs and Iron today. 


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THE CONSTITUTION, 


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__YAGE FOUR 
HE CONSTITUTION 


a 
a oe ts 


which are going bankrupt, or fdte- 


CLARK HOWELL 
Editor end President. 
Vice Ao aoe) me Og le ae 
HB. 8. TROLTL - 
Business Menager. 


at the Postoffice at Atlanta as 


second-class mail matter. 
Telephone WaAlinut 6565. 


SUBSCRIPTION RATES 
By Carrier of Mall: 
Daily and 1 Wk. 1Mo. 3 Mo. 6 Mo. 
Sunday 200 We $2.50 $5.60 
Daily only ite we 2.0 4.00 
Single Copies—Dai'y, 5c: Suaday, 10c. 
BY MAIL ONLY: 
45¢ $1.25 2.50 


Fonday 1U0¢ 


sones only. on application. 


és $5.00 
Mail rates for B. £. D. and small or aon-| civic bodies, reduce 
deaier towns for ist, 24 and $d postal 


ing citizens into bankruptcy by un- 
necessary duplication of county 
government, what about Georgia 
with her 159 counties? 


' Situated 


Take Butts county, for instance, 
in one of the best sec- 
tions of the state, it should be one 
of the most prosperous. When of- 
ficials of the county were summdon- 
ed before the state prison commis- 
sion for a hearing on complaints 


‘against the conduct of their county 


convict camp, the county warden 
said in defense that it would be 


foolish for Butts county, overwhelm- 


ed with debt, and with only 22 con- 
victs, to attempt to furnish hospi- 
tal facilities for‘its sick prisoners. 
That in itself is sufficient ar- 
raignment against the small county 


$0.39 | and a strong argument in behalf of 
7.50 | 


the move to consolidate several of 
these small counties into large 
the eternal 
overhead of unnecessary officials, 


oe } ° ‘ 
KELLY-SMITH COMPANY, national cep-| Create stronger counties with more 


resentatives, 
Boston, Philadelphia, 


THE CONSTITUTION its on sale 
York city by 2 
Jt can be nad: Hotaling’. 
Broadway and fForty-third 
building corner), 


Atlanta. 


in New 


News Stand, 


street 


The Constitution is not responsible tor | a loyal, 


edvance payments to out-of-town tocal car- 


riers, deaiers or agepts. Keceipts given tur | citizens. 
accordance | 
witb published rates are not authorized: also | 
subscription payments | 


Gubscription payments not in 


not responsible for 
until received at office of publication. 


Member of The Associated Press, 
The Associated Press is exclusively en- 
titled to use for publication of all sews 
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise 


credited to this paper and aiso the local | 


news published herein. 


ATLANTA, GA., JUNE 25, 1934. 


THE TAXPAYERS GROAN. 

A paper read by J. N. Heiskell, 
editor of the Arkansas Gazette, of 
Little Rock, before the Arkansas 
Peoples’ Conference on 
ment a 


1S most 


New York, Chicago, Detroit, | 


Govern- | 
cemprehensive | 


Statement of the evils arising from | 


the overplus of counties in the sev- 
eral states, and carries a scathing 
denouncement of the apathy of the 
people toward this important ques- 
tion, and the selfish, mercenary at- 
titude of “courthouse” and 
backwoods ‘‘statesmen” dis- 
courage county 
block what efforts 
that end. 
Throughout the 

county consolidation 
cussed and strenuously 


rings 
who 
are started to 


United States 
is being dis- 


| tations 
the loss of considerable of her rub- 


consolidations and | 
Dayton Tire Company, manufactur- 


advocated | 


by leading citizens and newspapers, | 


but after years of-talking the coun- 
ties of this country have been re- 
duced from 3,072 to 3,069, and of 
the three eliminated two were in 
Georgia. 

But despite the fact that the 
counties Milton and Campbell, 
which were consolidated with Ful- 
ton, have had their taxes reduced 
and have been given benefits they 
never could have had as separate 
entities, this fact, so pertinent to 
the well-being of the multitude of 
small counties of Georgia, has not 
had the effect of bringing about 
more consolidations. 

Arkansas has only 75 counties, as 
compared with Georgia’s 159, yet it 
is contended and shown that the 75 
are too many for that state, and 
Mr. Heiskell states that but for the 
fact that the Arkansas constitution 
of 1874 fastened an almost unvary- 
ing and inflexible form of govern- 
ment upon the counties it might 
have had many more. 

Citing instances of the utter use- 
Tessness of small counties, and of 


ot 


the burdens put upon taxpayers to) 


support their officials Mr. Heiskell 
mentions Mineral county, Colorado, 
with only 449 inhabitants, or about 
90 families, family 
out of five is employed by the coun- 
tv in some capacity. A press dispatch 
ef May, 1934, said Mineral county 


and about one 


has no money in sight to pay elec- | 
has not) 


as the county 
$1,500 


judges, 
paid the 


tion 


yet cost of the 


1932 elections. It {s amazing that | 


to hold an election in a county with 
90 families should cost the sum of 
$1,500, but it serves to demonstrate 
what it to the af- 
fairs of such a small county. 

Sneaking of conditions in Arkan- 
Mr. Heiskell said: 


COSTS conduct 


sas 


“The weakness and insufficiency of 
some small counties in this state, the 
their meeting 
the and demands of to- 
dav, appalling, pitiful. Not 
only are some of them lacking in ad- 
vanced social service, but at times the 
usual of eannot be 
held for lack of revenue to pay their 
expenses, A single important murder 
trial took practically all the revenue 
of one county-for a year, and there 
is one county that cannot expect to 
have this s0,000 
from its ad valorem 

Mr. 
Bromage, | 


in Michigan, as. saying 


utter impossibility of 


social 


CL i” 


are or 


sessions courts 


year much as 


as 
rey enue a 
Arthur W. 


conditions 


Heiskell 
8 


quoted 


, P . . + 
a ré\ ie A . A 


“Obstruetionist tactis and ASs- 


the 


county 


~ 


suredly loudest vocal complaints 


against eonsolidation come 


se rings which would 


More 


from the courthou 
he thereby 
able still 
im rural areas against 
‘that crowd’ in the counties east, west. 
or No man 
in this automobile age would map out 
the present jungle of small counties 
of Michigan.” 

It would appear that in almost 
every State in the Union there is a 
cry against the multitude of small 
counties that sap revenues to sup- 
port little civic divisions, with most 
of the money going to pay office- 
holders who have little to do but 
hold onto their jobs. 

The poor, dumb and blind popu- 
lace pays the bill—getting nothing 
for its money. 

If states with 75 to 100 counties 
are protesting against this uttertfy 
useless multiplicity of counties 


dethroned. formid- 


, | ; 
is verv decided feeling 


a 
INergers with 


porth south. rensonahle 


- * 


'and automobile 
| Du 


(that it does not age appreciably or 


| 
| 


economical admin- 
county govern- 


efficient and 
istration, provide 


D. m. the day after issue.| ments that can give greater pub- 
(Times |lic service, and in greater measure | 
| enjoy the confidence and respect of | 
alert and vigilant body of | 


The legal manner in which these 
consolidations may be brought 
about was demonstrated by the 
merging of Milton and Campbell 


counties into Fulton, but the les- 
son seems to be lost. 

Meanwhile the taxpayer groans 
under the burden of excessive and 
unnecessary taxation. 


SYNTHETIC AUTO TIRES. 


Great Britain, which controls the 
sale of most of the rubber imported 
into the United States, the same go- 
ing a long way to offset her impor- 
of our cotton, will suffer 


ber business in this country if a 
Synthetic rubber tire, just an- 
nounced, makes good in actual use, 
as it has in preliminary tests. 

The Du Pont Company, makers 
of the synthetic rubber, and the 
ers of the tires, assert that the syn- 
thetic tires look and wear like the 
real rubber article, and the an- 
nouncement has created great inter- 
est both with tire manufacturers 
interests, for the 
Pont Company is noted for 
making good on the claims for its 
products. 

Made from acetylene, salt and 
water, the tires are described as a 
curb on excessive prices for rubber 
at any time, and a guarantee of in- 
dependence for this country in case 
of war. 

The tires are made with the same 
machinery used in making rubber 
tires, and it is claimed that one ad- 
vantage of the synthetic rubber is 


deteriorate when exposed to the 
elements or in contact with solvents 
that affect rubber. 

Now if it can be shown that the 
synthetic tire is non-purcturable 
and blowout proof, at least in the 
same degree as the ordinary rubber 
tire, one of our greatest problems 
will be solved. 


WINDOW 


| By PIERRE VAN PAASSEN 


Subterrariean 


Airdromes. 

A reporter for the London Express 
writes to his paper that as he was 
driving along a road between Hanover 
and Celle in Germany one night re- 
cently, he saw lights in a forest, and 
walking over he saw hundreds of men 
at work on what appeared to be an 
underground airdrome. I have not 
the slightest doubt that Germany is 
pushing her re-armament campaign 
very hard, but that story about un- 
derground airdromes is a little bit too 
much to swallow. In the first place, 
Celle is a queer place to build an air- 
drome. But what makes the story 
quite incredible to me is this: Why 
should the Germans work on con- 
struction of such things in the dead 
of night? To escape attention of pass- 
ing motorists? If so. would not they 


who are usually so thoroughgoing in 
their precautions, have put out sen- 
tries along that road to keep fellows 
like the Express reporter from walk- 
ing over and quietly inspecting the 
whole show. 

I was once pulled up for trying to 
look over a wall around a poison-gas 
factory and that was in France. Does 
it seem likely that the Germans would 
allow a foreigner look around in an 
underground military secret airdrome 
before arresting him. Nonsense ! 

* * . 


Peace in 


Manchuria. 


A short dispatch from Reuter’s cor- 
respondent, Reuter’s Agency is not 
unfriendly to Japan, gives us an idea 
how things are going in the new pup- 
pet state of Manchukuo. A thou- 
sand Manchurian farmers were killed 
and their huts destroyed by airial 
bombing for a kick they had made 
against paying certain taxes. Jap- 
anese planes just came overhead and 
blew the men, women and children to 
bits. The dispatch further states that 
two “bandit” armies are on the ram- 
page in Manchukuo and that one 
of these armies has inflicted a severe 
defeat on a Japanese column. “Bandit” 
armies, mind you. And yet we were 
told months ago by the Japanese news 
agencies that all was peace and quiet 
in the newly conquered regions. 

By bandits are meant patriots, it 
should not be forgotten. People like 
George Washington, who refuse to 
have foreigners lord it over them. By 
giving them the name of bandits, the 
Japanese try to make it appear in for- 
eign eyes as if the Manchurian re- 
Sisters to their conquest are outlaws 
and gangsters, but they are the very 
opposite. In Manchuria there are 

lenty of bandits, but they come from 


apan. 
(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


HEALTH TALKS | 


BY DB. WILLIAM BRADY 


WHAT, NO QUININE FOR MA- 
LARIA. 


In the city where I studied medi- 
cine there was no endemic malaria. 
Only when visitors or newcomers from 
malarious districts happened to fall 
ill and enter the hospital did we have 
an opportunity to study malaria. Of 
course plenty of persons who had 
never been out of the «‘ty or the local 
territory imagined they had a touch 
of malaria, but we are speaking now 
of real malaria as diagnosed by finding 
the plasmodium or erganism of the 
(lisease in the red pniood corpuscles. 
Too, plenty of patients entering the 
hospital with typhoid fever, tubercu- 
losis, septic infection, syphilis and one 
thing and another had pbeen told by 
their doctors that they had a touch 
of malaria—that trick may still be 
practiced by the type of doctor that 
never troubles to make a microscopic 
test of the blood. 

(nce a beautiful cas2 of tertian ma- 
laria turned up in ‘ve hosy'tal, a 


|laborer from a souther.a state where 


WHINE OF A DRAFT DODGER. 


Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, now 
residing in Weinsberg, Germany, 
has set up a whine because Presi- 
dent Roosevelt will not allow him 
return to the United States on 
his own terms. 

It has been so many years ago| 
that this individual was first page | 
news that it is possible many will | 
not recall the man whose escapade 
made’ him ‘a man without a. 
country.” | 

He is the son of a wealthy New | 
York tamily who tried to dodge the | 


j 


to 


| draft to serve in the American army | 
|during the World War, and on be-| 


and 


‘have the ban against him lifted, but 


charge their bodies with 1,000,000 


ing arrested he managed to escape | 


make his way to Germany, | 
where he lived in luxury while the | 
sons of America answered the call | 
of their country and crosséd the 
sea to fight the nation that gave, 
this wealthy coward a safe retreat | 
from the perils of battle. | 

Several times during the past-16' 
vears efforts have been made to) 
the money spent for high-priced | 
lawyers to present his case has been, 
Spent in vain. 

In his useless appeal to President | 
Roosevelt he offered to surrender to} 
a civil court, but not to a military | 
court; probably in his twisted ideas | 
of-what wealth may accomplish he 


real malaria prevailed. The parasites 
were easily demonstrated in his blood. 
The clinical professor wished to make 
sure that every one of his students 
should have the opportunity to exam- 
ine a specimen of fresh blood. so he 
voiced the hope that the 


kill 
and cure the patient. So the interne, 
nothing loth for an experiment, ar- 
ranged to have the patient receive at 
reguiar intervals capsules purporting 
to contain quinine but actually con- 
taining only a pinch cf salts. The in- 
terne was not utterly unfeeiing about 
it. Indeed, he kept close watch over 
the patient, determined to give qui- 
nine immediately if the patierni showed 
any signs of getting worse under this 
—er-—scientific neglect. So the course 


patient | 
might receive no quinine for a while, | 
naturally fearing a vigorous exbibition 


/of quinine would the plasmodia | 


of the illness remained unchanged for | 


several days, chill, 


fever and sweat 


every alternate day. patient enjoying | 


his rest and the sprightly company of 
Other patients between whiles. 
of the medical students got their drops 
of blood and saw the malaria para- 
sites, all right. Then :be patient play- 
ed us a mean trick. He eot well with- 
oué€ any quinine. Not only that, but he 
made as prompt and -omplete a recov- 


parasites disappeared entirely from his 
blood. Although we kept him under ob- 
servation for as long 4s we considered 
fair. he evinced no further sign 
illness. 


tunity ‘to experiment on malaria pa- 
private practice. But i have wondered. 


ple. save one, of a <pecific we have 
in medicine. Quinine has long been 
regarded as a specific cure for ma- 
laria. But I don't know. I have asked 
myself many times whetber quinine, 


Most. 


' 


| 


; 


i 


News Behind the News 


By PAUL MALLON. 


TARIFF FOOLING 


WASHINGTON, June 24.—One man in 


this government believes something im- 
portant can be dome about foreign trade. He is George Peek. Other 
officials, who smoke up big statements and gr-r-reat speeches on 

‘the subject, will tell you behind their hands that it is just a little 


governmental by-play. 


Several insiders actually believe that President Roosevelt start- 
ed the tariff trade talk only because he had to get Peek out of 
the AAA and had no place to put him. 

Wiser ones have a better theory. They point out that the ad- 
ministration was forced to do something on the tariff because of 


campaign promises. Serious action was impossible 


because of 


world condtions. What could be better, then, than to have Mr. 
Peek play around with the issue in a harmless little way? 

Maybe some day in a year, or two, or three, the world situa- 
tion will get around to where something important can be done. 
In the meantime, Mr. Peek is laying a good groundwork. 

That is the real story underneath the bushel baskets full of 
words and figures now being exhibited by Mr. Peek and the for- 


eign trade ballyhoo squad. 


RESULTS The very first of the reciprocal trade treaties will be 

announced very soon. It is with Colombia. Negotia- 
tors completed it séveral weeks ago, but it cannot be made pub- 
lic until it is ratified by the Colombian senate. That is Just as well. 
No boats are waiting with steam up for the ratification of that 
treaty. You could carry all the trade it will promote in the side 


pocket of your car. 


It will be followed by treaties with Cuba, several other Latin- 
American nations and, possibly, two or three European countries. 
These, like the Colombian treaty, will be all to the good, but not 
good enough to make any substantial difference in the total vol- 


ume of trade. 


The reason for that was disclosed in the recently published 
Peek report. The world owes us billions (private and public debts). 
Mr. Peek concluded that, inasmuch as they cannot pay us, we 
should sell them more goods. He wants them to pay us with goods 


shipped to us. 


That sounds good, but everyone here knows our main trouble 
now is that we cannot consume enough to keep our own fac- 


tories and farms going. ‘ 


Hence, Mr. Peek must confine himself to things we do not pro- 


duce. That makes it a penny ante game 


players. 


KIDDING 


the same. 


among billion dollar 


Mr. Peek is such an enthusiast that he is not troubled 
about such things, but he has personal worries just 


These center around the fact that, while he is the foreign trade 
‘adviser, others seem to be more influential in handling the prob- 
lem. The leading one is Assistant State Secretary Francis Sayre. 
He negotiates all treaties. Mr. Peek, not being an official of the 
state department, cannot have anything to do with making treaties. 
(The state department saw to that). But all foreign trade agree- 
ments must be in the form of treaties. 

That leaves Mr. Peek in the position of an adviser in the sec- 


ond degree. 


It is quite clear that someone is fooling someone else on the 


inside of this thing. 


YELLING One of the presidential advisers was suggesting off- 
the-record the other day: 
“I think the greatest recovery step which could be taken in 


this country right now is for everyone to stop 


yelling. There 


should be a moratorium for three months on complaining by busi- 
ness, labor and all those not suffering real hardships. 

‘Here is business, half recovered, bleating about profits, extra 
hours, union leaders and what-not. Here is labor, working under 


as good conditions generally as it ever had, 


howling to high 


heaven because it cannot have everything it wants. 

“If everyone would shut up and work hard just for a trial 
period, the country would be a lot better off.” 

The gentleman who made these remarks knew well enough 
what a storm would break around his head if he ever came forward 


openly with such a proposal. 


PATIENCE General Johnson never has to look for trouble. It 
always seeks him out and he does what he can to see 


that it finds him. 


He has some very good friends high in the White House. Their 
friendship was strained when he fired the head of the union of 
his own NRA workers (John Donovan), saying in effect: ‘‘No one 
is going to tell me how to run my business.” Imagine this, from 


Johnson. 


The inside story, however, is much more favorable to the gen- 
eral than the published ones. The NRA union group is quite a high 
tension crowd, They move around the halls in groups of 10 to 20, 
looking like a mob. One newsman, noticing them recently, went up 
to see if they carried a rope. The expressions on their faces clearly 
indicated a lynching was imminent. They were merely going to see 


Johnson about sométhing. 


Their overly aggressive tactics, however, soon exhausted what 


little patience Johnson has. 


COIN TOSS There is an interesting story going the rounds 

and it may be true, although confirmation is lack- 
ing. It is to the effect that both Mrs. Dall and Elliott Roosevelt 
wanted divorces at the same time a year ago, but that the heads of 
the family insisted two divorces at once would be too much, that 
one of the children could get a divorce then and that the other 


would have to wait a year. 


Mrs. Dall went to see Elliott in the middle west and they de- 
cided to toss a coin to decide who should get a divorce first. El- 
liott won. That, at least, is the story. 


(Copyright, 


1934, by Paul Mallon.) 


A Few Officers Can Rule an Army Only While | 
The Privates Are Willing To Obey 


By Robert Quillen 


When Tolstoy began to preach the doctrine of passive resistance, 
the world laughed and called him a lunatic. 
“The way to handle a bully,” said practical men, “is to sock him 


on the jaw. 


And the way to handle any number of people is to put the 


screws on till they give up and agree to behave.” 
But now at least mankind is learning that physical force is helpless 


without the support of moral force. 


Germany depended on physical force alone and went down in ruin. 
A greater physical force crushed Germany, but the cost to the vic- 
'tors was infinitely greater than the gain. 

| After the war, when the defeated Germans refused to fulfill the terms 
of peace, France invaded German territory to enforce obedience. 

But again the cost was greater than the gain; and when Germany 
later refused to continue the payment of reparations, there was no talk 
‘of “making” her do it. 
Force can break the spirit and bend the will of one man, but no 


}ery as one could wish in any case,| force can compel a race of people to do anything against their will. 
whether quinine is given or not. The 


The whole framework of civilization depends on the willingness of 


men to do the thing that is right. 


€ foundation on which all credits and contracts and treaties are based. 


When men and nations no longer are willing to abide by the accepted 
[ have never had another oppor-|Tules of honor, there is no physical force to save the world from chaos. 
Japan violates treaties to gain new territory, and the world learns 
tients like that. Couldn't do it in| that treaties can no longer be enforced. 

Europe refuses to pay her debts and the world learns that no bond 
Quinine is probably the best exam-|js worth more than a nation’s word. 


Creditors cannot foreclose and take a nation, a state or a city. 


The 


lender has no security anywhere if men are no longer bound by honor. 


could foresee delays, appeals, and after all, cures malaria, or whether | 


He 


in the end possible acquittal. 


the cure is not like the cure of ty- 
phoid fever, a spontaneous reaction to 


fears a military court trial, knowing|the invasion through whith the body 


that it would be short, decisive and | 
no chance of appeal—but that is| 
what he will get if he ever steps | 
foot in America. 

“On 


» 
\ 


understand the 
Americanism of the present admin- | 


fails to 


istration in making an example of | 
a harmless person like me,” he 
whines. Of course he cannot un- 
derstand our brand of Americanism 
—he showed that by his dodging 
when drafted to serve with other 
American youths. 


A scientist says human beings 
would be better if they would 


volts of electricity. Weil, at least 


| 


i 


they would get accustomed 


, , ~ 
SHOCKS, 


Many people never accomplish 
anything but they know how to 
make expert excuSes for their fail- 
ures. : 


to | 


develops the necessary antidote. or 
germicide or parasitieide 
the invader. 


In short I strongly suspect that the 


idea that quinine cures malaria is just 


a superstition of the medicine man. 
If we could ineculate a few 


states prisoners with malaria 


other half no quinine. we might learn 


something astonishing medicine 
men. 


(Copyright, 


to 


1934, for The Constitut!oa.) 


- 


Feature Index _ | 


Editorial Page . 
Pierre Van Paassen Robert Quillen 
Dr. William Brady Mollie Merrick 
News of Georgia 5 
Theater Programs 

Financial 

Society 

Culbertson on Bridge 

“Restless Women” 


i i Ss ae a eee od 9, 
Caroline Chatfield 
Tarzan 

Atianta’s Wants 

Cross Sections ....... 


o dispose of 


hundred! was “stood 


‘vainly for 
Spouting Rock beach and then 
| parted disappointed. 


| 
| 


It is moral force that makes life and property safe. 


Destroy that 


and nothing rémains except the dog-eat-dog rule of the jungle. 
(Copyright. 1934, for The Constitution. ) 


ASTOR “STOOD UP” 
BY BRIDE-TO-BE 


| 


AT SOCIETY RESORT | 


NEWPORT, R. I... June 24.—(UP)! (UP)—Mrs. James Rovsevelt. mother 
John Jacob Astor LII, scion of wealth,| of the president. arrived aboard the 


up” by his 


give half of them quinine and the} today. 


! 


and! bride for more than two hours here 


Roosevelt’s Mother 
Arrives in England 


SOUTHAMPTON, Eng., June 24. 


prospective | liner Europa today for a visit abroad. 


She was met by United States Am- 
bassador Robert Bingham and pro- 


Young Astor, who is to marry El-| ceeded to London to spend a few days, 


Tuck French Saturday, waited 
her at  ultra-exclusive 
de- 


len 


There may have been two reasons 
for Miss French's failure to appear. 

Her father and stepmother, Mr. 
and Mrs. Francis Ormond French, ef 
Dedham, Mass., were in the vicinity. 
Also she may have been avoiding 
newsreel cameramen and  photogra- 
phers. 

“I do not like publicity,” Astor told 
reporters when asked to pose with 
“Tucky” for a film short. 

He then confessed he did not know 
his fiancee’s whereabouts. 

“] have been waiting for her here 
for some time,” he said. 

Hurtying away in bis new $20,000 
Rolls Royce, Astor narrowly missed 
crashing into a neighbor's limousine. 

Miss French was seen during the 
forenoon driving past the beach at 
high speed. She did not return, 


| 


after which she plans to visit friends 
in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Mrs. 
Roosevelt will spend some time on 
the continent before returning to 
America. 


MUSSOLINI, GOERING, 


DOLLFUSS TO MEET 


ROME, June 24.—(UP)—Another 
of Premier Benito Mussolini’s conter- 
ences with leaders of foreign states— 
this time with Chancellor Engelbert 
Dollfus, of Austria, and Premier Her- 
mann Wilhelm Goering, of Prussia— 
is to be held at Stra during the first 
week of July, it was learned reliably 
tonight. 

Discussion of Austro-German rela- 
tons along lines developed in the 
meeting between Mussolini and Chan- 
cellor Adolf Hitler at Stra June 14 
and 15 was believed object 
meeting. 


of the | 


FAIR ENOUGH] 


NEW YORK, 


Great Murder June 24. — Six 
New York de- 


Seen In Offing. tectives are Je 


voting their time exclusively to the 
Tufverson mystery and long cable 
messages have been exchanged w-th 
the police of Vienna aa? Scutland 
Yard. Eventually some fortunate po- 
liceman may be assigned to go to 
Vienna and bring back Ivan Ivano- 
vitch Poderjay possib'y on a working- 
charge of bigamy, lavceny or illegal 
parking. This all runs into consid- 
erable expense but the Tufverson 
case, if murder proves to have been 
done, will be a great murder. There 
are great murders and cheap murders 
and, in between the two extremes, 
thousands there are of nondescript or 
routine murders, 


There is no good reason why six 
detectives should be assigned to one 
case and only one man, or maybe none 
at all, to another, for all murders 
are equally outrageous and should be 
worked upon with the same enthusi- 
asm. But policemen like drama and 
they grade murder cases according to 
the value which is put upon them by 
the newspapers. If some common la- 
borer is found dead in a hall-way, 
apparently killed in a fight or hit 
over the head for his wages, the story 
is told in four lines somewhere in- 
side the paper and forgotten. The 
police may catch the assassin and 
the prosecutor, when he gets around 
to it, may let him plead guilty to 
second-degree murder and send him 
away for some years rather than go 
to the expense and bother of a trial. 


It would be 


Common Killings very foolish of 
a famous po- 


Gain No Notice. liceman of the 


type of Captain Ayers, of the New 
York bureau of missing persons, to 
assign half a dozen expensive detec- 
tives to interview dartenders and pur- 
sue leads all over town and even to 
Europe to arrest someone who hit a 
pick-and-shovel hand wit: a _ bottle 
and laid him dead in an alley. The 
reporters would think he was out of 
his mind. 

The victim, however, is just as 
dead as Joseph Bowne Elwell, the 
card-shark, or Dotty King, the Broad- 
way butterfly, as she was euphemisti- 
cally called. His sacred constitutional 
right to live on to some more natural 
and, possibly, more »othersome, end 
has been violated just as grievously. 

This is not to allege that snobbery 
or a caste system entirely governs 
the rating which is assigned to a mur- 
der, ‘although the snodbishness of the 
masses is distinctly betrayed by their 
panting interest in any disorder or 
embarrassment affecting the rich. An 
ordinary killing involving a member 
of a rich or famvuus family thus com- 
mands more attention than an iden- 
tical occurrence involving obscure or 
cheap people. Still the circumstances, 
or elements, of his or her taking-off 
may elevate the case of th: humblest 
person to all-time, all-America rating 
in the land of opportunity. Anna 
Aumueller, the victim in one of the 
all-time, all-American crimes, was a 
household servant. The fact that a 
Catholic clergyman, discredited though 
he was, did the killing, distinguished 
the crime from other murders of the 
so-called torso type too numerous and 
too obscure to remember. 


Bears Earmarks If Miss Tuf- 


verson was 
Of Unusual Case. killed this 

: crime of course 
will have all-time, all-America ele- 
ments, too. Her husband is a Euro- 
pean marrying-man of the standard 
adventurer type and if her body should 
never be found there can he no trial 
= even an indictment charging mur- 
er. 

Captain Ayres seems to have been 
considering this possibility when he 
remarked that it would have been 
possible to drop objects into the sea 
through the porthole of the cabin in 
which Ivan Ivanovitch Poderjay re- 
turned to Europe. 

There was a rich young New York 
man who killed a sailor of the United 
States navy one nigh= some years ago 
and admitted as much but was ac- 
qi@itted because he refused to plead 
guilty. His own uncorroborated ad- 
mission was insufficient and the state 
had no other evidence. It was one of 
those beautiful gems which occur ever 
so Often in police work and serve to 
promote respect for lawyers and the 


law. 

The British people cannot afford to 
be snobs in the matter of murder. 
They enjoy all their murders, even of 
the cheapest and their papers drama- 
tize and exploit the must ordinary 
killings in a way to disgust the Amer- 
ican connoisseur. But they have so 
few murders that they cannot waste 
any. If they had 11,000 a year they 
-_ cultivate a really fastidious 
aste. 


(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


90-Degree Weather 
Forecast for Today 


The expected 95-degree weather for 
Sunday failed to arrive, but the fore- 


cast for today still holds 90-degree 


weather in prospect, according to 
George Mindling, United States me- 
teorologist. 

Today’s skies will be clear, he said, 
and the temperature will range be- 
tween 70 and 90 degrees. Sunday it 
was expected the mercury would get 


to 95 degrees, beating the highest for 


That willingness, long taken for granted by civilized races, is the | Saturday of 93 degrees. However, the 


mercury failed to reach even 90 de- 
grees. The highest Sunday was 8.2 
degrees, recorded at 1 o’clock in the 
afternoon. The mercury then began 
to drop and was down to 8S degrees 
within an hour and to 83 degrees in 
two hours. The lowest was recorded 
in the morning, when 76 degrees were 
registered. ; 


HENDLEY V. BAYNE, 
EX-ATLANTAN, DIES 


Hendley V. Bayne, former Atlantan, 
died Sunday at a hospital in Mus- 
cogee, Okla., and the body will be 
brought here for funeral services and 
interment, 


Mr. Bayne was well known in the) 


drug business in Oklahoma City for 
many years before going to Muscogee. 


He is survived by his mother, Mrs. | 


Ella E. Bayne; four sisters, 
John Stone and Mrs. Lon Smith, all 
of Atlanta; Mrs. Joe Griffin, of Tem- 
ple, Ga., and Mrs. B. Stradley, of 
Texas; a brother-in-law, John W. 
Alexander, of Atlanta, and a sister- 
in-law, Mrs. George Bayne, of At- 
lanta. Arrangements for the funeral 
will be announced by Harry G. Poole. 


ROTARIANS TO OPEN 


CONVENTION TODAY 


DETROIT, June 24.—(4)—From 
the four quarters of the earth, dele- 
gates were arriving today for the 
twenty-fifth annual convention of Ro- 
tary International, which opens here 
tomorrow with readjustments necessi- 
tated by the world depression as one 
of the major themes. 

The advance guard of registrants 
numbered well into the thousands to- 
day. and it was predicted that by 
the time the convention sessions open 
tomorrow morning, 10,000 delegates 
‘would be here, 


Mrs. | 


; 
’ 


| 


HOLLYWOOD IN PERSON 


BY MOLLIE MERRICK. 


HOLLYWOOD, Cal., June 24.— 
Time was when you Ban the table- 
cloth on the table. Today you put it 
on the lady. 

At least when you see how success- 
ful Esther Ralston is in her table- 
cloth sports coat, you begin to won- 
der what next. And whatever it is 
that comes next, if it does as well as 
this innovation it’s all right. 

On a natural linen background runs 
a plaid of brown, black, tan and 
burnt orange. The frock which goes 
with the coat is of maize crepe. The 
hat‘is of natural-colored straw with a 
brown grosgrain ribbon. The result is 
delicious. 

The coat is cut so that the revers 
roll softly back into a broad collar, 
which has a seam in the middle of 
its back. Those cute pockets with 
pointed tips are not a pair of napkins 
mounted on the coat—they’re just the 
corners of the tablecloth—very full 
of orange, by the way, and therefore 
very interesting in the general color 
scheme—mounted at the right angle 


for chic. 


* « « 


Janet Gaynor sponsors the cinema 

dress—a more informal type of din- 
ner gown with long sleeves, very long 
skirt, just touching the floor, and a 
little jacket which buttons about one 
slickly and is worn with or without a 
hat, as climate, or fancy, dictates. 
_ Printed things are especially chic 
in the cinema frock, Janet Gaynor 
has a black flat crepe with great 
smears of powdery blue. This favo- 
rite cinema frock is daring and em- 
phasizes her russet beauty. It is worn 
with a tiny blue chapeau, and a bag 
of blue crepe gives it the correct eve- 
ning look. 

Blue linen sandals are worn when 
the gown is used without a hat. When 
worn with head covering, opera pumps 
of powder blue suede with very high 


soft 
loose. 


gloves. 


heels complete the symphony. 
* 7 


If you go for beads this season, your 


when she relaxes the 
(Copyright, 


basic color must be restrained, says 
Travis Banton, and he is a chap who © 
knows. | 

He indicates the frock which Gene- | 
vieve Tobin is wearing for evening © 
formal affairs as being one of the © 
outstanding examples of this. : 

Of palest grey georgette, the entire - 
fabric glitters with tiny crystal beads. 
There is a short box-type coat with a 
huge band of platinum grey fox ° 
around its hem. The sleeves are 
cuffed almost to the elbow with the 
same fox. 

‘This serves to emphasize the very — 
slim hips of Genevieve Tobin. Her — 
beauty is blonde, suave, sophisticated © 
and chic. With this frock she some- 
times wears a string of oriental crys- - 
tals with merest rims of platinum. 
_ often she wears no jewels at 
all. 


. « * 


Pat Patterson is one girl who can 
carry sports things as if born to them. 
She is wearing a beret of white felt 
plaided in orange green and brown 
these days. With it comes a white 
coat, cut polo style and of the soft, 
fluffy wool fabric which characterizes 
our best polo coats. 


English tennis shoes laced neatly 
over the insteps complete this ideal 
morning costume for the girl who can 
really wear it. What makes Pat Pat- 
terson’s beret look so correct is the 
fact that her hair is brushed straight 
back from the brow without a single 
mitigating curl. There is a sudden 
fluff of curls at the back of her head, 
but the front view presents the se- 
verity which should invariably accom- 
pany the sportsmanlike beret. 

White doeskin gloves, hand-sewn in 
white, have a button at the wrist, are 
as velvet and are worn very 

The smarter the gal, the more 
the “Wizard of Oz” effect in her 
They should — fall off 
ist. 


1934, for The Constitution and 
North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) 


Welcome Death Comes at Last 
To Colorful Colorado Leader 


DENVER, June 24.—()—Charles 
S. Thomas, 84, who capped a stormy 
career as United States senator and 
governor of Colorado by defying 
President Roosevelt’s 1933 order 
against gold hoarding, died today. 

Thomas’ life had been ebbing for 
weeks, and many times he had ex- 
pressed his willingness to die. 

Once he pushed away a meal set 
before him by his daughter, Miss 
Edith Thomas, and said: 

“Why should I eat? I am ready 
to die.” 

Though a democrat all his life, 
Thomas frequently clashed with lead- 
ers of his party. He termed “undemo- 
cratic” the powers given Franklin D. 
Roosevelt as president and in_the 
Wilson administration opposed Unit- 
ed States’ participation in the League 
of Nations and Versailles treaty. 


He had retired from active politi- 
cal life last year when the president 


in 1871 


called for the surrender of gold to the 
treasury, in connection with the na- 
tional banking crisis. Thomas acquired 
more gold than the law allowed, and 
defied the government to seize his 
“hoard” of $120. 

“I have qualified for the peniten- 
tiary and am at your. service,” he 
wrote te prosecuting authorities. 

His “hoard” was ignored, but later 
his daughter was indicted for gold 
hoarding, and Thomas announced he 
would help defend her on the ground 
that the order deprived citizens of 
their property without due process of 
law, and therefore was unconstitu- 
tional. This case is pending. 

Thomas sought unceasingly during 
his term in the senate—from 1915 to 
1921—to have silver rehabilitated as 
a currency base. 

He was born in Darien, Ga., De- 
cember 6, 1849, but came to Colorado 


Judge To Aid Sister’s Fight 
For Freedom of Bert Long 


By HERMAN D. HANCOCK. 

Judge E. Marvin Underwood, of the 
north Georgia federal district court, 
if asked, will aid in presenting a pett- 
tion for a presidential pardon for Bert 
Long, who has served 16 years in the 
federal pen here for a murder which 
Thomas F. Carden said he commit- 
ted. 

The jurist’s assertion came Sunday 
after Miss Nannie Maye Long, 20, of 
Chattanooga, sister of Bert Long, ap- 
pealed to him over the telephone. 

Judge Underwood advised her to file 
the petition for a pardon, and said that 
if he is asked by Attorney-General 
Homer Cummings he will identify the 
confession Carden made on May 28 
at his court in Rome. 

Long was convicted 16 years ago of 
the slaying of Charles Earle, a sol- 
dier, on the Chickamauga park gov- 
ernment reservation near Chattanooga. 

Miss Long Sunday saw her brother 
for the first time since the sensa- 
tional confession and prepared to 
push her drive for an appeal to Presi- 
dent Franklin Roosevelt “for a com- 
plete and unconditional pardon, 
which she confidently believes will be 
the successful culmination of a nine- 
year fight to obtain her brother's re- 
lease. 

Judge Underwood pointed out that 
he could not recommend the pardon, 
but that he would write the letter if 
asked to do so. He declined to ex- 
press any opinion as to the truthful- 
ness of the confession which Carden 
signed and presented to his court. 
Camp Examining Document. 

The confession, which said that Car- 
den testified against Long because the 
latter turned state’s evidence prior to 
the killing in another case in which 
they were implicated, has been turned 
over to United States District Attor- 
ney Lawrence S. Camp, who is con- 
ducting an investigation to establish 
its truthfulness. 

Irked by the slow processes of legal 
machinery, Miss Long Sunday prepar- 
ed to drive for the pardon and to cir- 
cumvent red tape in her efforts to 
expedite the release of her brother. 

She also said that press reports re- 
garding Long’s reception of the news 
of Carden’s confession had been muis- 
leading, and that she is convinced that 
her brother is innocent. 

“My brother was quoted as express- 
ing surprise at the confession,” she 
said, “and the stories appear to have 
misconstrued that surprise. The only 
surprise was that Carden, who kept 
his secret for 16 years and allowed 
my brother to languish in 
would at last tell the truth.” 

Long maintained his innocence in a 
conversation with his sister Sunday 
as he always has done previously. 

Dazed and puzzled because Long 
has not been released, Miss Long said 
she and her family “who need him to 
help us make a living, can not under- 
stand why there should be any delay 
by the government in doing every- 
thing possible to make some kind of 
restitution for the fact that an inno- 
cent member of our family has been 
imprisoned for so long a period. 

Confessed at Rome. 


room confession to having committed 


prison, | 


| stated: i 
| losses yesterday at 61 killed and 170. 
Carden. on May 28, made a court-| 


‘surprise’ he was supposed to have 
registered when told of the confession. 
He should be freed and at once. That 
confession is right. Carden confessed 
to me last fall.” 

Carden is now doing a stretch in 
the federal prison on charges of rob- 
bery, and Long has seen him, accord- 
ing to reports. Whether the two men 
have discussed the case could not be 
learned. Carden came into the prison. 
since he made the May 28 confession. 

In Jail 16 Years. 

Long was at the federal prison 16 
years last Friday, on which day, by 
an odd coincidence, one of his sisters, 
Pauline Long, observed her sixteenth. 
birthday. She was born on the same 
day her brother was sent to prison 
and they have never seen each other. 
There also is another sister, Georgia, 
13, whom Long has never seen. 

Another sister, Melba, 18, and an- 
other brother, Basil, 30, in addition 
to the parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. 
Long, comprise the other members of 
the family. 

“Our family needs the help of our 
brother,” Miss Long said. “Our father 
is virtually disabled because of rheu- 
matism. Mother is aging rapidly. 
Basil does not live at home. He is 
married and only the girls are there 
to make a living. 

“I want to be a nurse, and as soon 
as I have obtained the release of 
brother, I shall go into training. At 
the present time we are forced to live 
frugally. Every member of the fam-. 
ily has saved and scrimped to raise 
funds to seek Bert’s freedom, as any 
other family would have done if con- 
vinced of the innocence of the charge. 

“It has been hard for us. We are 
nearly at the end of our rope. We 
never have had much money. We 
are just striving to make a living hon- 
estly. . 

“The time has come when the gov- 
ernment should recognize its mistake 
and do what it can to heal the broken 
hearts of my father and mother and 
to alleviate the embarrassment to his, 
brother and sisters.” 

Miss Long left Sunday night for 
Chattanooga to gather additional data 
to include in the pardon application 
and said she will return within the 
next few days to file the necessary 
papers. 


Last Bulwark Held 
By Bolivian Forces 


BUENOS AIRES, June 24.—(4)— 
The outcome of the terrific battle at 
Fort Ballivian, last remaining Bo- 
livian bulwark in the Gran Chaco, 
was clouded today. | 

Bolivian claims reported officially 
yesterday from La Paz that 2,00U, 
Paraguayans had been killed or 
wounded in a deadly artiHery barrage 
were flatly denied today in Asuncion 
where the ministry of defense declar- 
ed that between 2.000 and 2,560 Bo- 
livians had been killed or wounded. 

The Paraguayan losses were 
the Bolivians placed 


noe 
their 


wounded: but it appeared deiinite that, 
Fort Ballivian still remains m Beliv” 


the killing before Judge E. Marvit} jan hands. 


Underwood, of the north Georgia dis-| 


trict federal court, who was holding 
court in Rome. 

Since that time there has been 
marked reticence on the part of fed- 
eral officials to discuss the matter, 
the only information available from 
official sources being that “we are 
checking the confession.’ 

“We pro to use every means 
available to obtain the release of our 
brother,” Miss Long asserted im 
speaking for herself and other mem- 
bers of her family. “If officials do not 
act we plan a direct and personal ap- 
peal to Mr. Roosevelt, and believe that 
he will intervene to prevent an inno- 
cent man and his family from suffer- 
ing any longer. We have every con- 
fidence in him and we have been as- 
sured that our petition will be given 
proper consideration. 

“Rert told me today that he never 
killed anyone in his life and that he 
was innocent of the crime. He said he 
had been misunderstood regarding the 


Three Youths Jailed — 
In Gas Station The‘t 


Charged with the larceny of $1509) 
and a pistol from a filling station op- 
erator, Jessie Godby, 19; Sam Hayes, 
18, and Curtis Suddeth, 20, all of near 
Union City, were in Fulton towery 
Sunday. 4 

The three youths were arrested by? 
County Policemen Bentley and Speer™ 
early Sunday morning, shortly after? 
they had allegedly stolen the cash ands 

istol from the filling station of Char ¥ 
ey Stack, near Dixie lakes on the” 
Roosevelt highway. Stack said thee 
money was taken while he was serv-’ 
ieing a car at the front of. the statiwur 
by persons who sneaked in the ba: x 
door and rifled the cash register4 
County police said the pistol and par\ 
of the money was recovered. a 


THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934. 


PAGE FIVE 


— ) 


Reviewing the Shows 


Beauty, Power Mark 
‘Thunder Over Mexico’ 


What may have been in the orixi- 
nal 200,000 feet of film exposed by 
Sergei Eisenstein in making “Thunder 
Over: Mexico” is beyond our ken. How- 
ever, a visit to the Erlanger Satur- 
day convinced us that the 7,000 feet 
left by the Hollywood choppers con- 
tain enough of sheer photographic 
beauty and cinematic power to be 
worth the while of anyone interested 
in. out-of-the-ordinary celluloid fare. 

Vitriolie controversy may  becloud 
the merits and demerits of many 
phases of FEisenstein’s work but 
few will deny that he and _ his 
lens’ manipulator, E. Tisse, possess 
a working knowledge of the camera's 
abilities equaled by few. 

In “Thunder Over Mexico” this 
knowledge is translated into breath- 
taking beanty time and again. The ex- 
teriors. naturally pleasing, give 
their full charm to his camera. The 
interiors afford even more chance for 
the demonstration of his artistry and 
the treatment of lights and shadows 
and proportion is startling. 

Another phase of this lens magic 
is in the clever montages which de- 
liver complicated idea. intact in brief 
seconds. Allied to this is the strik- 
ing way in which the force of con- 
trast is brought into play through 
swift changes from images of great 
beauty to ones of equal ugliness. Then 
there is the telling symbolic use of 
the lens (though at times, particularly 
in the Jatter stages, this becomes a 
bit weak) with death’s heads grin- 
ning forth from unfforms and danc- 
ers’ garh. 

The story is of a peon, Sebastian, 
en a hacienda in the days of Diaz, 
the tyrant. He brings his bride-to-be 
to his hacendado to gain approval for 
marriage. Instead she is ravished by 
a guest. The peon attacks the guest 
and after this gesture of defiance 
makes a futile effort to free the girl. 

In company with his luckless com- 
panions he flees to the hills only to 
be ridden down and he dies a horri- 
ble death. Then the revolution is 
treated with in impressionistic 
style and you are’ left with the some- 
what erroneous impression that every- 
thing is swell in Old Mexico. 

None can say what Eisenstein would 


have made of the thing if he had cut ! 


it. Certainly the assault on religion 


‘for a world-wide 
This association seems to keep a staff 


| Brown. 


Lee Tracy at Rialto 
In Funny News Yarn 


Lee Tracy, in the role of Brown. 
the reporter, in “I'll Tell the World,” 
current feature at the Rialto thea- 
ter, portrays a newspaperman of the 
kind that never existed in real news- 
paper life. Consequently, as is true 


‘of all fairy tales, the picture is might- 
lily entertaining. 
‘life newspaper story would be fright- 
‘fully dull. 


After all, a true to 


This mythical reporter then, works 
press association. 


of incompetents all over the world, so 


|that whenever a big story breaks they 
|have to rush their one good man to 
| the spot to cover it. 
up |life just a series of frantic journeys, 


Which makes 


by plane and boat and whatnot, for 
the brilliant Brown. 

Of course, there is a rival, the simi- 
larly peripatetic reporter for a riral 
press service and, equally of course, 
Brown always gets his own story 
through and succeeds in wrecking the 
phone service or the radio sending 
apparatus in time to muzzle his rival. 

Gloria Stuart is lovely as the femi- 
nine interest. She was—in the story 
——raised and educated in America, 
Raltimore, to be geographically pre- 
cise. But really she is a queen, head 
of the deposed royal house of some 
European country. And Brown's man- 
aging editor gets wind of a plot t 
restore the monarchy. And Brown is 
rushed ont on the assignment. Of 
course. And meets the girl, equally 
of course. 

And at the end it all turns out 
to be the plotting and rival plotting 
parties, using the queen’s life as a 
pawn—and Brown saves the day and 
the queen and the picture. And even- 
tually takes the beautiful young queen 
back to plain American life as Mrs. 
Could anything be plainer? 

Don't think for a minute that, be- 
cause the plot is rather unlikely in 
real life, that it is anv the less en- 
tertaining as reel life. It is a snappy, 
humorous. pleasing and romantic pic- 
ture. With lots of action as well 
as romance. Edward Sedgwick has 
done a really good job of direction. 

The short subjects each add their 


and capitalism—twin phobias of Mos-|@uota to the value of the program 
cow—wouldn't have been toned down | 48 & Whole and, if you seek just en- 


so much, 
moot, 
Fisenstein’s friends have 
Upton Sinclair—and this 
bad boy of letters makes a 


accused 
perennial 
good case 


at the Rialto. 
—RATLPH < JONES. 


ee a ee 


The desirability of this ar yergec seg” vou'll not be disappoint- 
i € 
} 


‘COTTON SEED CRUSHERS 


JOHN (. VAUGHN DIES 
IN THOMASVILLE AT 62 


s 


Was Prominent Ceotrnatei 
and County Commissioner 
for Thomas. 


THOMASVILLE, Ga., Juae 24.— 
John C, Vaughn, 62, Thoiunas county 
commissioner and one of .he most 
prominent citizens of Thomasville, 
died at his home here Saturday after- 
noon after a lengthy illness. 

Stricken five weeks ago with an 
acute attack of appendicitis, Mr. 
Vaughn underwent an emergeucy op- 
eration at the Archibald hosyitai, and 
after recovcring rapidly from the ef- 
fects of the operation, contracted pleu- 
risy, which developed into pneumonia. 

Funeral services are varranged for 
Monday afternoon with interment to 
take place at Laurel Hill cemetery 
following services at the residence. 

Mr. Vaughn is survived by his 
wifé: one daughter, Miss Florence 
Jones Vaughn, of this city, and one 
sister, Mrs. E. A. Almand, of Savan- 
vah. 


Tornado Hits Claxton, 
Does Little Damage 


CLAXTON, Ga., June 24.—(/)—A 
tornado, coming from Register way, 
struck Claxton this afternoon at 2:15 


o'clock, lifted the roof off the Claxton 
cotton warehouse and tore away part 
of the home of G. C. Edwards. 

The tornado rolled up on Claxton 
like a huge ball of black smoke, 
dipped down and struck the roof of 
the warehouse, a brick tuilding, ap- 
parently bounced off with the roof as 
a sample of its destructive powers, 
hit the Edwards house, which is of 
frame construction, and then left the 
city toward Glennville. 

Evidently it struck but twice in 
the limits of the city, for little other 
damage was reported. It did not tear 
away any trees or poles or other up- 
right objects, but picked out two sub- 
stantial buildings and did all of its 
damage there. 

A few minutes later Claxton was 
left without any wind at all, so rap- 


} - Wins Home Economics Cup 


Ethel Harben, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Harben, of Chamblee, 


with the cup for the outstanding student in home economics presented | 


by the Chamblee High school. She also won highest honors in the fifth 
district contest held recently in Decatur. She will be a senior at Chamblee 


High next fall. 


r 
TWO ENTER RACE 


FOR BIBB VACANCY 
MACON, Ga., June 24.—(4)—John 
F. Brown, Bibb county farmer and 
dairyman, Saturday became the sec- 


end man to announce his candidacy|today with the head and arms badly | 
beaten. | 
Sheriff -P. L. Yeomans arrested two 
/'men whose names he gave as Lehman | 


for the office of county commissioner 


ty sueceed C. C. Hunaicutt, who died | 


Wednesday. 


TWO HELD FOR KILLING 


OF SWAINSBORO YOUTH 

SWAINSBORO, Ga., June 24.—() 
The body of L. C. Roberson Jr., 22- 
year-old farmer, was found near here 


MRS. VEREEN RITES. 
AT MOULTRIE TODAY 


MOULTRIE, Ga., June 24.—(#)— 
Mrs. W. C. Vereen, one of Georgia’s 
most widely know leaders in women’s 
affairs, who died here last night, will 
be buried tomorrow. 

Honorary president of the Georgia 
Chapter of the United Daughters of 
the Confederacy and regent of the lo- 
cal chapter of the Daughters of the 
American Revolution, Mrs. Vereen 
was a prominent figure in the two or- 
ganizations. She was in her seventy- 
fourth year. 

The funeral services will be con- 
ducted at the Presbyterian church to- 
morrow afternoon. 

Surviving are her husband, W. C. 
Vereen, capitalist and 
and former member of the state high- 
way board; two daughters, Mrs. R. 
(. Bell, wife of a judge of the Geor- 
gia supreme ecourt, and Mrs. J. H. 
Smithwick, wife of a former congress- 
man from the third Florida district, 
and two sons, FE. M. Vereen and W. 
J. Vereen, the latter a former presi- 
dent of the American Cotton Manu- 
facturers’ Association. 


54,681 Jobs Obtained 
In State Since Fall 


MACON, Ga., June 24.—(/)—The 
federal re-employment service in Geor- 
gia has placed 54,681 persons in busi- 
ness and industry since the offices 
opened last September, it was re- 
vealed today through a compilation 
of data by Harry Mitchell. statistician 
in the office of the state director, 
Lineoln McConnell. 

Of this number 3,183 have been 
placed since the first of June. Of 
the June placements, 1,682 were. made 
with private organizations which, now 
that CWA work and other national 
employment projects are closed par- 
tially, will have to sbsorb more and 
more unemployed labor, 

The building trades are leading in 
the number of men still without work, 
it was stated. 


—_——- 


State Deaths 
And Funerals 


manufacturer | 


PROBATION OFFICERS 
NAMED FOR GEORGIA 


MACON, Ga., Juna 24.—(4)—The 
appointment of Frederick Krenson, 
formerly of Savannah, as United 
States probation officer fur the middle 


district of Georgia was announced 
here today at the same time that the 
appointment of Charles E, Roberts as 
chief probation officcr was made 
known. 

Krenson has been traveling around 
the territory with Roberts since his 
arrival here, becoming acquainted 


with the officers and probationers. 
He will complete that tour this week 
when he visits the Columbus district. 


--- 


Abbit Nix Speaks. 

MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga., June 24. 
Abbit Nix, of Athens, was the princi- 
pal speaker at the one hundredth an- 
niversary exercises of the Milledge- 
ville Masonic lodge, No. 3, held here 
Friday night. Joe T, Andrews, worshipe 
ful master, who presided at the cere- 
montes, it a grandson of Judge Har- 
ris. who was worshipful master of 
the lodge 100 years ago. 


MH 


CLE 


Convenient 


ANES 


NEW PRICE 
POLICY 


“Cash-Over-Counter’ Service 


Neighborhood Sto res 


SUIT 4 


ba 


Was 


‘ 


DRESS 


Plain 
Street 


for himself in his introductory re- 
marks-—-of selling out Art to Mam- 
mon. Well, it also is dehatable as to 
whether working with one eve on the 
hox office and Mrs. Grundy does any 
more harm to the artistic merits of 
a picture than working with two eves 
and both ears trained on the Kremlin 
and Jolly Joe Stalin. 
--~LEWHKS HAWKINS, 


In the regular commissioner's elec-| Hooks, about 22, and Chancey Arch- | | 

—— | tion two years ago Mr. Brown placed | er, 35. They were booked on a charge | ARTHUR B. EVERETT. | 
SAVANNAH, Ga., June 24.—(P)— | Savannah Hit. 'seventh in a field of 14 candidates.| of murder. WEST POINT, Ga.,_ June 24,—Funeral | 

Georgia cotton seed crushers meet | SAVANNAH, Ga., June 24.—(}-- | Five candidates were elected. Before} The sheriff said Roberson was fa- | Mice gt pt eel by held at Me | 

here tomorrow for a two-day econven-| Two chimneys in the southeastern sec-| that time he had never offered for 4) tally injured in a fight which started con tina atieeneaie' wt a ecleck, The | 

tion, P. D. McCarley, Atlanta, presi-| tion of the city were knocked down | public office. 

dent, presiding. 


‘at sunrise following an all-night party. 'hody was transferred to that place tonight. | a 5 
About 200 are ex-/by lightning during a thunderstorm Ed Crimmins, Macon sign painting) | 
pected in attendance, 


| Interment will be at Fort Valley. , | 

i . "= . 4 4 Y \ » ; i Lv , s i GQ ‘ «ot 

Operators of{|here this afternoon. A heavy rain| contractor, announced Friday that he' candidate is W. E. Stewart, local rail-| Bg Bh no a ite Steer ar seaeee | Telephone HEmlock 8900 
cotton seed mills, brokers, and the/and gusty wind accompanied the; would make the race, Another man| road official, who finished sixth in the| trom @ Macon hospital, where he had been! 7 

storm. widely mentioned as a_ prospective! last election. | ill several weeks, 


MEETING AT SAVANNAH | "9 had the tornado passed over. 
For Service to 
Your Home. «5 .ccecs 


like, will be present. { 


_ 


Theater Programs 


Copyright, 1934, B. J. Reynolds T Company 


Picture and Stage Shows 


CAPITOL—'‘‘Where Sinners Meet.’’ with 
Clyde Brook. Diana Wrnyard, etc., 
at 11:45, 2:30. 5.04, 7:38 and 19:12. 
“Girls in Cellophane.’’ on stage, at 
1:35, 4:00, 6:13 and 9:17. Short 
subjects, 


= — 


Burlesque 


ATLANTA—"'Rarin’ to Go.”’ with Texas 
Wagner, Hap Farnell. ete. Matinee 
at 2:30. Tonight at 8:30. 


-———e— 


First-Run Pictures 
ERLANGER — ‘Thunder 


with native Mexican 
he Sergi Elsenstein. 
8:36 and %- 45 
the Works." 
Jack Onakie, Dorothy Dell, 
1:42, 2:44. 8:46. 7:38 and 
40. Newsreel and short subjects, 
LOEW'S GRAND—‘‘Operator 12,"' with 
Marion Davies, Gary Cooper. etc. at 
at:au, 3:32, 32:34, 6:36. 7:38, 9:40. 
Newsreel and short subjects 
PARAMOUNT—''Dr. Monica,”’ with Kar 
Francis, Warren Williams, etc., at 
11:37. 1:19, 3:01. 443. 6:25. 8:07 
—_ 9:49. Newsreel and short sub- 
ects. 
RIALTO—‘‘I'll Tel! 
Lee Tracy, 
11:00, 12:30. 
and 9:43. 
jects. 


Over Mexico." 
cast, aAfrected 
at 2:00, 4:12, 


with Ren 


the World,’’ with 
Gloria Stuart. etc.. 
a:ae, 4:13, 6:01. 


Newsreel and short sub- 


Second-Run Pictures 


Jones. 


Neigh hevhood Theaters 


AMERICAN—‘‘lIimmy and Sallv."’ with 
James Dunn 

BAN .;HEAD Fiving Down to 
nith Delores del Ric 

BUCKHEAD—''S'\x of a Kind.”’ 
star caat, at 2:45, 53:00 
and 9:40 

COLLEGE PARK—''let'« Fall ir 
with Fulov vd lowe 

DEKALB— ‘David Harum.’’ 
Rovers 

EMPIRE—' ‘Heopie.”’ (lara Bow 

FAIRFAX—''Ieath Takes a Holidar,” 
with Fredrie March 

FAIRVIEW— ‘Refore Midnicht *’ 

HILAN—'‘Rolero,’’ with Georce Raft 

KIRKWOOD—‘‘Carolina,’’ with Janet 


(;,arner 
LAKEWOOD HEIGHTS—' Rk: 
licht.’’ with Flilisa Landi 
LIBERTY—''Hips. Fips 
Wheeler and Woolser 
MADISON—'‘Caronlina,’’ with 
nor 


PALACE— 


Hunter,’’ with 


Rio.** 


all 
si 


with 


*) Py. 
I ove ’ 


with 


with 


Candle- 


Hioorar.”’ 


with 
Tanet Gar- 


Death Takes a Holidar.’ 


with Janet Qarvrnor 
PONCE DE LECKA— ‘Launching 

with Vik MeLacien 
TENTH STREET—‘'(5 0! 

1933." with all-star 
WEST END— ‘(cme on 


Richard Arlen 


for 


Marines,’’ 


Colored Theaters 


81—"'BRiack Cat."’ with Rela Tugost! 

ROYAIL— ‘Harlem After Midin 
with all-colored cast 

STRAND—‘‘42nd_ Street,” 


> " 
OWeeiy 


rhe *? 
. 


‘Shoot the Works”’ 


WITH 
Ben Bernie and Band. Jack Oakie. 
Dorothy Dell. Roscoe Karns. Alison 
Skipworth. 6 New Song Hits, 


PARAMOUNT pupuurenees 
KAY FRANCIS 


“DR. MONICA’”’ 
WARREN WILLIAM 


STAGE 


The 


scaren 
Brook 
Wrnvard 
IN 
“W here 
Sinners Meet” 


Musi-giri 
Rew ve! 
“GIRLS IN 
CELLOPHANE"”’ 
with 
Billy Wade 
jee Penner's 
Only Rival 


Clive 
Diana 


ey 


Soe) s SS 


THAT TIRED “OFFICE” LOOK— | 


> . 


{ 


and then he .' 10 


NEED ENERGY? 


research made in the laboratories of science. 

And so—"get a lift with a Camel!” Any 
time you want to enjoy yourself or restore 
yourself. Steady smoking need not concern 
Camel smokers, since the finer, MORE EX- 
PENSIVE TOBACCOS in Camels never get on 


Here’s the latest word from Science on 


increasing Vim and Energy.. quickly! 


fn 


CAMELS 


Today we call attention again to important 
facts which were presented to smokers in a 
recent item in this paper. 
Perhaps you overlooked it. We repeat: 
You can release new vigor, when tired, by 


smoking a Camel. 


This comes from the “energizing effect” in 


Costlier Tobaccos 
never gef on 
your Nerves, 


Camels as recently confirmed and described 
by a famous New York scientific laboratory. 


Everyone gets fatigued...cross...down in the 


dumps...when his energy is used up. But the 
way to turn on more energy has now been 


pointed out, by actual Camel smokers who tell 


of their own experiences. And by up-to-date 


your nerves. 


“Get a LIFT 


wi « 2 26 Os y nom ogee. ‘ 


ked a Camel! 


Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS 
—Turkish and Domestic—than any other popular brand. 


’ 
Starts 
’ 


with a Camel !” 


“Murder in | 
Priyate Car” 


ADDED 
Charlie Chase 
Mickey Mouse 


Hearst Metrotonews 


Se Se ee eT ee ee Te eee are 
a ” Pn ae $ a eet per |) ok aft *y 
ed rt Se “ 


_ a 2 


a ON he oe ee a 
< ae Pe) 
Can raat it LD in * ae ne 


*y 4 rs 8) 2 
Baugh ee ee Nee igen 
ee Meek we PE, 
a ie! 


THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA,, MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934. 


4, , —SAben tht d, f. 
(fy 4A, 4 AS fh ff (Le AAs (f/f / 


Nee 


he en at ett am Ae are arn ie lat time mk te tlt octal am 


A General Weekly Review of Commerce and Industry Affecting the Greater 
Edited By JACK TUBBS 


ee a epee yee we 


sf, 
Af, 


OO re eS . 


‘OF BUS 


Atlanta Trade Territory 


~~ @-<« 
i : 
Sy, A. 
a) ‘ 


—— ore - ————_—_—_O ~~ - = 


— ee _—_ ——-- we 


Atlanta Tent & hablo Ca. Offers Welcome Relief F ia Sicitiniaity Heat 
CHEVROLET SALES Crumbley Handles Delivery 


WINDOWS SHADED 


IN BRIGHT COLORS 


ADD 10 COMFORTS 


Enhancement of Home 
Beauty Urged by J. D. 
Couch; Varied Hues, 
Styles and Materials 
Offered. 


Atlanta 
really 


With 
the first 
mer, 


fiery blasts of sum- 


sweltering beneath | 


| 
| 


' 


' 
} 
j 


| 


} 
; 


home owners are turning in in- 


creasing numbers to the Atlanta Tent | 


& Awning Company for relief from 
the discomforts imposed by unshaded 
windows, doors and porches, J. D. 


Couch, manager of the awning depart- | 


ment, reports. 

A’ home without awnings, Mr. 
Couch asserts, is certain to be an un- 
comfortable and in many cases an 
unpleasant place in which to live 
during the hot summer months. 
sible home owners, who have grown 


accnstomed during the past years of | 


depression to staying at home in the 


summers, are turning to awnings to. 


checkmate the sun’s flaming rays, and 
to make their homes cool and 
fortable. 

Not only do awnings make for a 


more pleasant home, but add definiie- | 
| years. 


ly to its value and enbance its beauty 
to an unusual degree, : 

The Atlanta Tent & Awning Com- 
pany, which maintains its factory. 
offices and an excellent service di 
partment at its plant in Fast 
is prepared to supply awnings in 
the widest assortment of colors in 


ER ee a 
te nen 
ee 


Dine in Comfort at 


Je: | 
Point, | 


‘cerns of this type. 
com- 


| ter 
| awnings selected will most adequately | 


| suit the architectural lines and style! +\: 
| from 


Superior Workmanship Key Atlanta Ribbon & Carbon Co. Finds 


Cleaners’ Success 


| Strong evidence of a general quick- 
ening of the business pulse are report- 


Be <ancitinnel 


: Here, in the modernly-equipped silk spotting and finishing depart- 
|ment of the Lloyd Cleaners’ plant at 681-83 Boulevard, N. E., skilled 
hands are seen at their tasks of restoring delicate garments to their 
Original freshness and luster. This is but one of the major departments | 
in the Lloyd Cleaners’ plant which places its service and its workman- | 


Ship among the finest in the city. 


People of discernment, who insist | 


Sen. | Upon the most careful treatment of ! 


their clothes, have found in the Lloyd | 
Cleaners the ultimate in dry cleaning, | 
efficiently, effectively and thoroughly | 
done at a cost in keeping with that | 
for work done by othet reputable con- | 

Standing as they do in front ranks | 
of. dry-cleaning establishments in the! 


Color, says Mr. Couch, is one’ 
of the most important factors to be! 
considered in selecting awnings, and | 
the company offers the aid of experts | 
in choosing the proper hues for this 
purpose. 
These experts, qualified by long ex-| 
perience, also are trained in the mat- | 
of design selection, so that the | 


Of Lloyd 


| the most 


|The plant is under the direct personal 
supervision of Thomas W. Lloyd. 


ed by J. B. Herndon, owner of the 
Atlanta Ribbon & Carbon Company, 
225 Ten Forsyth building, who re- 
ports also a steadily, increasing de- 
mand for his products during the past 


year. 

The Atlanta Ribbon & Carbon Com- 
pany has just celebrated its first an- 
niversary as exclusive Georgia dis- 
tributer for all products. of the Ault 
& Wiborg Carbon & Ribbon Com- 
pany. of Cincinnati, a subsidiary of 
the International Printing Ink Cor- 
poration, world’s Jargest ink manufac- 
turing concern, 

Mr. Herndon reports a tremendous- 
ly increasing demand on the part of 
business institutions for Ault & Wi- 
borg products. Not only is this de- 
mand gaining by leaps and bounds in 
Atlanta and Georgia, he asserts, but 
is being felt throughout the nation. 

In addition to the most complete 
line of carbon paper and ribbons, the 
Ault & Wiborg Company recently has 
perfected and introduced a new type- 
writer ribbon—Process No. 7—whicb 
represents a revolutionary improve- 
| ment over the types heretofore in use. 
The Process No. 7 ribbon, Mr. Hern- 
don declares, contains 60 per cent 
more pigment than any other tegen 
city, the Lloyd Cleaners are widely os oe deme asetamne 
known by Atlantans—many from) ije The coloring matter, he adds, 
servation--tor their enviable reputa: |, 33 Detiect euapension. AAG iets, i 
tion for dependability and fair treat- | aa he red ct iy into Sbhon. 
ment. Much of the success of Lloyd Process No. 7 ribbons cannot dry 
Cleaners is due to their policy of con- out, as do many others. The new 


+ Ss ve 
er >: mA a9 SSE 
Olesen tantra TY TS ED SOY sO : 


} 


| sistently dependable service and good | ribbon, he asserts, gives more depth 


} 


friendly sie ‘of color, yet a much sharper imprint. 
nn | reek | Another recent innovation in office 

A model of efficiency, the Lloyd! materials, Mr. Herndon states, is Ault 
Cleaners’ plant at 681-83 Boulevard, | © Wiborg’s Red Writing Hood carbon 
N. E., is completely equipped with | paper. After many months of experi- 
( up-to-date machinery for the | menting, Mr. Herndon states, Ault & 
handling of every type of cleaning.| Wiberg perfected a carbon paper 
which meets every requirement, with 
‘consequent saving in time, carbon pa- 


the city,! per, ribbon—and_ temper. 


will. Lloyd Cleaners’ service 1s a 


In order to best serve 
Lloyd Cleaners operate’ three addi-| 
tional branches—at 990 Gordon) says Mr. Herndon, offers the greatest 
street, S. W., 395 Moreland avenue, | improvement in handling earbon pa- 
*. KE., and 1030 Peachtree street,| per since the invention of the type- 
which prompt delivery service| writer. The carbon paper is perfo- 


Red Writing Hood carbon paper, | 


the home. 
| Mr. Couch urges homes owners con- 
templating the instailation of awn- | 
' ings to place orders at once, in order | 
| that they may obtain the full benefit | 
of them during the 


of 
| 


HARVEY’S 


also is maintained. 

Throughout its entire organization, 
the Lloyd Cleaners’ staff, including 
clerks, skilled craftsmen and delivery- 
men, is composed of persons with long 


rated and Sslitted at the ends, which 
are held firmly together by a_ hood. 
The user inserts the number of car- 
bon sheets required, according to the 
number of copies desired. eliminating 


AIR- 
CONDITIONED 


Special: 


Assorted cold cuts. 
Salad, cole slaw, rolls, 
butter and beer ,... 


potato 


25¢ 
corn muffins, 
RESTAURANT S 


Fresh vegetable plate—choice 
iced tea 
oo. ALL NIGHT 


of four vegetables, rolls or 
98 LUCKIE NW W,.WA.71358 


greatest part of | 


the summer. 


| SAFETY 


f 
UNCERTAINTY! 


Which do you want 
for your savings? 


The Fulton County Federal 
Savings & Loan Association 
109 HURT BUILDING 
is chartered by and under the 
Supervision of the 
United States Government. 


ne —_— 
a ee 


FIRS 


To loan for financing or refinancing y 
plan. It eliminates future worries and 


1110 Standard Building 


T MORTGAGE MONEY 
6%—6}3%—7% interest. 


our home on our disappearing mortgage 
enables you to pay for your hume. 


JEFFERSON MORTGAGE CO., INC. | 


WaAlnut 0814 


Cunningham Motorcycle 
Company 
Harley-Davidson 
Sales—Service—Parts 
17 Hunnicutt St., N. W. JA. 3238 


| Mr. Lloyd. “can the beauty and life 


| garment 


| ly proven processes known, to insure, 
| jn so far as engineering skill is capa- 
| ble, 


| process 
_ bedded soil as well as the surface soil. 


and oil stains, as well as paint and | 


| taking hand work for their removal. 
| Lloyd Cleaners’ customers are unan- 
-imous in praise of the 


experience and thorough knowledge of | handling of each sheet either in inter- 
the factors necessary to insure the/|jeaying or removing. 
finest workmanship. | Red Writing Hood carbon paper | 
“Only by proper handling,” declares | permits the making of from 3 to 20 
lcopies at one time, thus insuring a 
of fine fabrics be preserved. Every) vast saving in time over old-fashioned 
which goes through Our! methods. 
plants undergoes the most scientifical- Red Writing Hood carbon paper. 
‘Mr. Herndon states, is packed 100 
 gheets to the box. together with five 
a superior job, satisfactorily | hoods and five strips. Thus equipped, 
lanv office may outfit several typists 
The Lloyd Cleaners live by the! vith hooded “books” of carbon sheets 
rule that only the thoroughly cleaned | in ¢he proper number required for | 
garment maintains the luster aad life his or her work. It is both simple | 
of newness. To insure these factors, | 
they submit every garment to the 
necessary extra time in the cleaning} the customer, thue assuring the owner 
to eliminate the deeply im-( of the finest cleaning obtainable. © 
Thus combining skill, purity of 
This extra time in the cleaning proc-; cleaning fluids and extra time, the 
ess in no way interferes with prompt| Lloyd Cleaners have won and are 


done.” 


nee 


| of the consumers goods lines such as 
| textiles and 


Heavy Demand tor Improved Types 


| 
: 
| 
| 
| 


J. B. HERNDON. 
and easy to use, as countless typists 
will testify. 


Mr. Herndon, with a decade of ex- 
perience in the carbon and ribbon 


business, is fully qualified to diagnose 
business office needs and to render | 
a satisfying service.. He invites con- | 
sultation at any time on such prob- | 
lems, especially as they affect office | 
efficiency through the use of proper | 
typing materials. 


Industry and Trade 
Exceed Expectations 


NEW YORK, June 24.—(?)—In- 
dustry and trade have approached the 
end of the second quarter of 1934 
with a volume of activity substantial- 
ly above that expected some weeks 
ago. 

The movement of railway freight 
has risen to close to the spring peak 
reached in March, with merchandise 
shipments reaching the best levels for 
this time of year since 1931. Elec- 
tric power production statistics show- 
ed a small gain, registering the high- 
est figure since close to the year’s 
peak, 

Steel, automobiles and_ electrical 
appliances are still well in the lead 
in industrial activity. while several 


shoes, which enjoyed 


such a spectacular recovery a year 


RECORD INCREASE 
OF 331 3PERCENT 


Whitehall Reports Gen- 


eral Upturn in Volume 
of New and Used Cars 
to Date This Year. 


Tidings of better times are echoed 
in an announcement by J. D. Mitch- 
am, new-car sales manager for the 
Whitehall Chevrolet Company, that 
his company has registered an in- 
crease of approximately 331-3 per 
cent in new Chevrolet sales to date 
this year over the curresponding pe- 


| riod of 1938. 


“This record has been achieved by 
the Whitehall Chevrolet Company,” 
says Mr. Mitcham, ‘‘despite the fact 
we were unable to make any deliv- 
eries during the first two months of 
the year.” 

Due to the recent reduction in 
prices, he asserts, the company sees 
indications that June will be the 
greatest month of the year thus far, 
its sales volume far exceeding earlier 
months, and that the remainder of the 
year will prove even better from a 
sales standpoint. 

Mr. Mitcham is one of the White- 
hall Chevrolet Company's two new- 
car sales managers, the other being 
Gordon Thompson. They are in 
charge of a thoroughly trained staff 
of salesmen. 

Not only does this Increase in busi- 
ness apply to new cars, says Mr. 
Mitcham, but also is reflected in used 
car sales and in the service depart- 
ment. In the latter department, 
which is under the s:pervision of T. 
M. Simmons, service manager, busi- 
ness has shown a steady increase each 
month this year. 

The huge Whitehall Chevrolet Com- 
pany used car lot, fronting on Spring 
street at Whitehall, is in charge of 
W. C. Rodgers, used car sales man- 
ager, who reports a correspondingly 
consistent gain in sales to date this 
year. Approximately 500 used cars, 
he reports, have been sold by the com- 
pany to date this year, and a wide 
assortment of passenger cars and 
trucks in many makes, models and 
types, is to be found on the lot at all 
times, offering a varied selection to 
meet almost any individual need. 

The Whitehall Chevrolet Company, 


of which Hal Smith is general man- | 


ager, covers an area 
an entire city block, with offices at 
329 Whitehall street, S. W. It is 
flanked by its used car lot, and the 
rear of the building ieads direct to a 


ago, now somewhat under the levels; large separate building in which the 


of this time in 1933. 


service department is housed. 


service. After the removal of general} maintaining the wholehearted ap- 
soils, food and drink spots, grease! proval of their countless Atlanta cus- 


tomers. : eo 
The Lloyd Cleaners, in addition to 


dry cleaning, offer a complete service 
including the cleaning and glazing of 
furs, mothproofing, hat and glove 
cleaning, cleaning of draperies and 
other household articles, and many 
other such services. 


other persistent spots require pains- 


excellence of 

the workmanship. 
Every garment must pass a strin-| 

gent inspection before its return to 


Mr. Merchant 


You can reach every 
home in Atlanta direct 
at small cost with 


CRUMBLEY delivered 


circulars. 


Phone WA. 2480 


DODGE CARS—DODGE TRUCKS—PLYMOUTH CARS 
SALES AND SERVICE 
USED CARS 


J. M. HARRISON & CO. 


North Ave. and West Peachtree 


HE. 9580 


Pay As You Ride On Fisks 


_ MULKEY TIRE C0. 


New Location 
Junction Whitehall, Forsyth and 
Spring Sts. 

PHONE WA, 2232 


Complete Line of Fisk Tires and Tubes 


Auto Accessories Fishing Tackle 
Hardware 


"ROOF" 
ela GE 

Lead SS: 

=272 Fy 

2 I: " at 


ft ” 


ai 


ROOFING CO. 


WA. 5747. 141 Houston St., N. E. 


Ragsdale 


Motor Co. Inc. 


EAST POINT, GA. CA. 3511. 
AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR 


Hudson 


—AND— 


Terraplane 


Before buying any make drive our new 
HUDSON and TERRAPLANE. 


ALL MAKES OF USED CARS. 


AXLE and WHEEL ALIGNMENT 


COMPLETE SPRING SERVICE — ELECTRIC WELDING 


RALEIGH DRENNON 


“Serving Atlanta for 25 Years” 
353 WEST PEACHTREE ST., N. E. 


WA. 1328 


A. M. CHANDLER, Inc. 


AUTHORIZED SALES SERVICE 


Cars Trucks 
134-138 E. Ponce de Leon Avenue, Decatur 


DE. 2771 


— 


—— ' 
; 


WA. 1113 


-INSURANCE - 


Nine-Point—-Modern—Automobile Insurance 


Cole, Sanford & Whitmire 
: Trust Company of Georgia Bldg. 


Twenty-four hour service 
on envelopes when you 
must have it! 


ATLANTA 


Se VELOPE 
COMPANY 


505-7-9-11 Stewart Ave., S. W. 
Main 3370 


Atlanta's Finest Warehouse 


M4 ODEEN facitities for storage. Fire- 

proof building. Complete protection 
for rour household gooda, furs. valuables. 
For moving, commodious tans manned by 
expert movers. 


Cathcart Allied 
Storage Co. 


134 Houston &t. WAL. 778] 
W. Lawt. Inglis, Pres 


Household Goods Exclusively 


Z 


_ INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPARY 
OF AMERICA 


Will Do a Better 
Job 


Building Materials for Repairs 


CEMENT, LIME PLASTERING 
ROOFING PEE GEE PAINTS 


Ready-Mixed Concrete 


Atlanta Aggregate Co. 


721 Angier Ave. WA. 1658 


COMPANY 


A Friendly Service 
WA. 1412 


WHITEHALL 


A Good Product 
329 Whitehall St. 


Washington Seminary 
Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Georgia 


Some features that commend the school to parents 
seeking the best in the education of their daughters: 


Unusually beautiful grounds, buildings, furnishings like those 

of an elegant private home. 

2. Boarding department limited to thirty students; home influ- 
ences and care. 

3. Classes divided into small sections; personal attention to each 
pupil; supervised study. 

4. Healthful, mild winter climate. 1100 ft. above sea-level. 
OPEN-AIR CLASS ROOMS for use in seasonable weather. 

5. Four literary courses leading to graduation; Music, Art, Ex- 
pression, Domestic Science, Physical Training. 

6. Fully accredited. 


i. 


i 
; 
; 


Miss Emma B. Scott | 


Llewellyn D. Scott 


Chrysler-Plymouth 


Harry Sommers, Inc. 
Distributors Since 1924 


' ; 
; 


57th year begins Sept. 13, 1934. | | 
| 


187 Edgewood Ave. 


NOW—A REAL CONE! 


The Grand—The Baby Grand 
IT’S DIFFERENT! 


Made on automatic machines and packed in air-tight 
tins, the distinctive, delicious flavor and fresh crispness 


of this new Brower GRAND cone is assured 
CANNOT STICK—BREAKAGE PRACTICALLY 


BROWER CANDY COMPANY 


Exclusive Distributors 


ELIMINATED 


JA. 6226 


approximating | 


HOLLAND TIRE CO., Inc. 


28-30 Ivy St. 


Exclusive Distributor 


KELLY SPRINGFIELD 


. TIRES AND TUBES 
WA, 0700 
Ivy St. Garage Bidg. 


Biss 


' 3 .% 
| 


» ys 
* 


Of New Telephone Directory 


eee ee ee aan iat - TVW OWN ee ewe ewe wee oe 
MS 
+ : fate 
> So 
. . nse at oo 


Distribution of Atlanta’s new tele- 
phone directory, just off the presses, 
again is being handled by the Crum- 


wood avenue, 8S. E., which has under- 
taken this tremendous task with emi- 
; nent success a number of times in the 
| past. 

No job of delivering printed mat- 
ter is too large or too small for the 
Crumbley organization—a fact well 
understood when one realizes the huge 
tonnage involved in the delivery of the 
telephone directories. Approximately 
64,000 books. weighing an aggregate 
of about 75,000 pounds—37 1-2 tons— 
are in process of delivery, which will 
be completed within the coming week. 


The Crumbley organization, headed 
by A. 8S. Crumbley, is equipped both 
In experience and in manpower to 
handle such hee distribution jobs 
with creditable dispatch, as countless 
Atlanta business concerns and nation- 


and will testify. 

In distributing the new telephone 
books, about 60 men will be employed, 
using a fleet of 20 trucks and cars 
and covering, in addition to Atlanta 
proper, the outlying areas of Stone 


Oe a 


Superior Quality 


WIPING RAGS 
POLISHING CLOTHS 


GUARANTEED 

Washed and 
Sterilized 

ROTHSCHILD & CO. 


WA. 0533 329 Decatur St., 8. E. 


ee 


A truck from the Ruralist Press, 
directory, is shown here as the books are unloaded at the Edgewood 
avenue “clearing house’ of the Crumbley Distributing Service. The 
Crumbley organization again is handling the distribution of approxi- 
mately 64,000 directories, totaling approximately 75,000 pounds. 


bley Distributing Service, 121 Edze-' 


printers of Atlanta’s new telephone 


| Point, Hapeville. College Park. Cham- 
| blee, Avondale Estates and other sec- 
tions. 

The new telephone books, printed 
by the Ruralist Press, are delivered 
idirect to the “clearing house” of the 
‘Crumbley Distributing Sertice, where 
'they are assigned to crews covering 
| Yarious sections of the city. These 
'ecrews, the members of which are al- 
| ways in the distinctive Crumbley uni- 
|form, are armed with lists which guide 
them unerringly to the doors of tele- 
'phone users. As they deliver the new 
books, they are instructed to collect 
the old books in return, 

Crumbley distributors are carefully 
trained men, working under the con- 
stant supervision of expert crew heads 
and inspectors, a system which donbly 


ally known companies have learned 


safeguards the advertiser against faul- 
ty distribution of printed matter. 


Dependable Roofing 
Service 


AMERICAN 


Mountain, Clarkston, Decatur, East | 


ASPHALT 
SHINGLE 
ROLL ROOFING 


Re-roofing and 
Repairing 


DEPENDON 


ROOFING SUPPLY CO. 
59 Simpson St. WA. 7664 


GEO. GRIFFIN, JR. 


The Model Laundry 


Houston at Jackson. 


“There Ils No Substitute For Quality” 


J. 0. MANGUM 


WA. 2372 


MORE THAN TWO ACRES! 


aa 
| 106,006 SqFeet . 


Service 


COMPANY 


CA. 2166 


11 Marietta St., N. W. 


COURTS & CO. 


Members New York Stock Exchange, New York Cotton Exchange | 
Associate Members New York Curb Exchange 


U. S. GOVERNMENT AND MUNICIPAL BONDS 
CORPORATE BONDS AND STOCKS 
HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORATION BONDS 
INVESTMENT ADVISORY SERVICE. 


Phone WA, 9110. 


my boy thrifty and get 
dollar?” 


- 


634 WHITEHALL ST. 


“CATERPILLAR” DIESEL POWER UNITS 


YANCEY BROS., I 


“CATERPILLAR” 


OIL BURNER | 
FARM TRACTOR 
Saves } Fuel Cost 


nc. 
ATLANTA, GA. 


Wise fathers teach their 


very best means. 


State Agent. 


thrift and economy by inducing systematic saving—to which 
end an Equitable policy on the life of the boy is one of the 
It gives the boy his first real conception 
of the economic value of a life—his own for instance—and 
establishes an early contact with a commodity that may 
prove to be a big success factor im the years to follow. 


BUY LIFE INSURANCE NOW. 


Aetna Life Insurance Co.—Carson & Dobbins, Gen. Agts. 
Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co., of Newark, N. d.—Robt. L. Foreman, 


Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co.—Luther FE. Allen, Gen. Agt. 
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co.—Emory L. Jenks, 
Union Central Life Ins. Co.—Thos. H. Daniel, Gen. Agt. 


“As The Twig Is Bent, 
The Tree’s Inclined” 


FTEN nowadays we hear a father say, ‘‘How.can I make 


him to realize the value of a 


By placing a policy of insurance on his life and helping 
him during the early years to maintain it, the first step in 
a program of life-long saving is taken. 


boys the invaluable habits of 


Gen. Agt. 


Wi 


“2 & & & & -©-s--@-8--@ © -6--@ -©--s--@ -@-e B--e--8--e--e 
by % =f 


i - - 
Sa isa 


LR. Stee wy 


PES bE TS ig 


De Spies gy * 


- 


THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934 


PAGE SEVEN 


Camp Fire Girls Local Council 
Will Conduct Summer Program 


Camp Fire Girls will conduct a|Stanley Hastings in charge of those 
city summer progran. in the Atlan-/| working on woodgatherers’ rank, Mrs. 


ta council this summer, 


being the A. E. Wilson helping the firemakers 


sixth consecutive summer that a plan-| and Miss Mary Green, the torchbear- 


ned program has been given to Camp | ers. 


It is hoped that with this in- 


Fire Girls and any of their friends | struction every girl will advance in 


who care to participate. 
lard Beals is the director in charge 


Mrs. Mil-| rank during the summer and will be 


‘ready to be awarded her rank at the 


of the many activities that have been council fire that will be held at the 


scheduled hetween June 20 and Au- 
gust 18. 


who have to remain at home or stay 
at camp for only a short time, and 
it was to assure these. girls 
happy, profitable summer that this or- 
ganized city program was started. 
Every Monday morning at 10:30 
oclock handcraft classes will be held 
at Camp Fire headquarters, fifth floor 
Davison-Paxon Company, at which 
time clever articles for use in a girl's 
reom will be made. The theme for the 
classes will be “Use Your Symbol,” 
and girls will make spattee printed 
handkerchiefs. shade pulls, plaques 
and many other interesting things. to 
make their rooms more individual. 
Gjirls are requested to bring copies 
of tHKeir symbols to all class meet- 
ings, 

On Wednesday morning at 10:30 


Camp Fire Girls journey to Avon- | 


8. While the majority of Camp| On 
Fire Girls attended Camp Toccoa dur- | thing 
ing the summer, there are some girls | 


of 4 at 10:30 o'clock. 


iclose of the summer program. 

each Friday some interesting 
will be planned and announced 
| each week. This week there will 
|be a spend-the-lay at Oakland City 
| park, meeting at the front entrance 
A simple lunch, 
‘swimming and singing will add great- 
ly to the enjoyment of the day. This 
is planned especially for girls living 
| in West End, College Park, Fast 

Point and Hapeville, but any other 
girls who can attend will be cordially 
received. 

A new national honor has been re- 
ceived for this year and the require- 
ments may be secured from any guard- 
ian or from the Camp Fire office. 
These requirements are closely corre- 
ilated with rank requirements, so in 
_working for the national honor a 
|Camp Fire Girl can at the same time 
'be earning honors that will count on 
[her rank. 

With school out and lots of leisure 


dale park where they spend the day |time for the young girls, Camp Fire 


swimming, singing, studying rank, 
eating lunch and learning new hon- 
ors. 


instruction and the opportunity 
passing tests. After a picnie lunch 
under the trees three groups are form- 
ed for the study of rank 


With a dip fee of only 10c | happy vacation period. 
any girl ean have the advantage of | tween 
of | 


‘office or 
, with Mrs. /she will be placed in a group. 


furnishes many wholesome activities 
and interesting projects to make for a 
Any girl be- 
the ages of 10 and 18 who 
would like to join this organization 
to communicate with the 
to call Walnut 3738 and 


‘jis asked 


WOMEN’S 
- MEETINGS 


MONDAY, JUNE 25. 
Mimosa Garden Club meets at 3 
o’clock with Mrs. W. F. Shallen- 


berger, on Westminster drive in 


Ansley Park. 


Members of the Y. W. C. A. 
board of directors meet at Camp 
Highland at 10:30 o'clock. 


Peachtree Garden Club meets with 
Mrs. Cam Dorsey at her home on 
Habersham road, at 3:30 o'clock. 


Quota Club meets at the Frances 
Virginia at 6 o'clock. 


| 


i) Jewrsh Club Ofens 
Roof Garden July 3. 


Sidney Saul, chairman of the en- 
tertainment committee of the Jewish 


Progressive Club, announces that the 
roof garden, which has been under 
construction for several weeks, has 
been completed and will be formally 
opened Tuesday evening, July 3. 
An elaborate cabaret will feature 
the opening with the music being 


furnished by a well-known orchestra. 


‘Mlle. Bil 
Will Give Talk 


(‘lub members are requested to make 
their reservations with Mr. Saul or 
the secretary of the club, 


lant 


A talk on “The Cathedral: Its Spir- 
itual Mission.” by Mlle. Lucie Bil- 
lant, of the LaGrang> Woman’s Col- 


Great Council of Pocahontas Installs Officers 


en 8 errr es www my tr re ee ’~+ 


ter, of Hagerstown, Md., great incohonee of the Improved Order of Red Men officiating, and the offi- 
cers are pictured left to right, front row, Miss Catherine Dunn, Augusta, great Winonah; Mr. Wachter, 
and Mrs. Lula King, great Pocahontas; second row, let to right, Mrs. Naomi 
prophetess; Mrs. Evelyn Tuttle, great Minnehaha; Mrs. Cora Smith, great keeper of records, and Mrs. 
Clara Wilson, great keeper of wampum. Staff photograph by Bill Mason. 


Medlock, Decatur, great 


Farrar-Reppert Rites 
Performed in N. Y. 


garet Elizabeth Farrar, danghter of 
Mr. and Mrs. James Kirkpatrick Far- 
rar, of Bainbridge and Dalton, Ga., 
was married Thursday to Roland Ern- 
est Reppert, son of Mr. and 


The Rev. Dr. Curtis Dickins, for- 
mer dean of the chaplain’s corps, N, 
S. N., officiated. The bride's sister, 
Miss Sara Agnes maid 
of honor. 

The couple 


Farrar, was 


sailed on the liner, 
Quirigua, for a wedding trip to South 


NEW YORK, June 24.—Miss Mar- 


Mrs. | 
Adolph Reppert. of Larchmont. N. Y., | 
in the Cathedral of St. John the Di- 
vine. 


IT’S UP TO THE V’OMEN™ 


By Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt 


by Mrs. Roosevelt herself. 


Following is one of a sertes of 60 articles in which the First Lady 
of the Land tells what she thinks about a variety of subjects close 
to the heart of all modern women. Every word has been written 


XXXI—THE NEW SOCIAL ORDER 


When Frances Perkins says “I can't | 


'go away because under the new in-| 


dustrial bill we have a chance to| 


I came to realize that when all is 
said and done, women are different 
from men. They are equals in many 
ways, but they cannot refuse to ac- 


Miss Pittman Weds 
Mr. McEachern 
In Griffin, Ga. 


GRIFFIN, June 24.—The mar- 
riage of Miss Josephine Pittman and 
Malcolm McEachern, of Biloxi, Miss., 
was solemnized Friday afternoon at 
the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. 
and Mrs. Frank S. Pittman, on South 
Hill street, Griffin. Rev. W. T. Hun- 
nicutt performed the ceremony in the 
presence of relatives and a few close 
friends. . 

The bride, a _ strikingly handsome 
brunette, a wore a becoming ensemble 
of navy blue triple sheer with a waist 
of blue and white striped sheer fin- 
ished with a white pique collar, The 
short coat to match avas faced with 
white stripes like waist. A small blue 
felt hat, bag, shoes and other acces- 
sories were of matching blue. Her 
shoulder bouquet was of sweetheart 
roses and valley lilies. 

e bride is the only daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank 8. Pittman and 
is gifted with a charming personal- 
ity and a brilliant mentality. She has 
been one of the most popular girls 
in her set, all of whom regret her 
marriage will take her away from 
Griffin to live. Her only brother is 
Frank S. Pittman Jr., of Prattville, 
Alabama. 

The groom is the second son of Dr. 
C. G. McEachern and the late Mrs. 
McEachern, of New Orleans, La. His 
mother, before her marriage, was Miss 
Laura Griffin and his only brother is 
Griffin McEachern. The groom has 
been a student at Tulane University 
for the past two years, and his mar- 
riage to Miss Pittman is the culmina- 
tion of a romance of a year. He met 
Miss Pittman, who has been a student 
of Newcomb College, New Orleans, 
where they met and fell in love. When 
Mr. McEachern came to visit 
Miss Pittman, who was taking a 
summer course at Milledgeville, they 
decided to return to her home in 
Griffin to be married. 

The bride and groom motored to 
Chattanooga and from there they will 
go to Chicago to attend the World’s 
Fair. On their return Mr. and Mrs. 
MecEachern will make their home in 
Biloxi, Miss. 


Miss Hightower 
To Wed W ednesday. 


NELSON, Ga., June 24.—Cordial 
interest of friends in the south is 
centered in the wedding of Miss Mar- 
garet Hightower, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. E. W. Hightower, of Nelson, 
to Donnell Dixon MacCarthy, of 
Chapel Hill, N. C. The ceremony 
will be solemnized in the garden of 
the bride’s parents at 9 o clock Wed- 


Y.W.C.A. Boardof Ditectors 
Meet at Camp Highland Today ~ 


Meeting at Camp Highland on Mon- 
day, the Y. W. C. A. board of direc- 
tors will enjoy skits and stunts by 
the dramatics class, camp songs and 
a swimming meet, and will be enter- 
tained at a luncheon in the camp 
dining room, with Miss Anne Prid- 
more acting as hostese and assisted by 
Miss Nora Dill, camp dietitian. Mrs. 
Luther Rosser will preside at board 
meeting, which will place emphasis 
on camp program, scholarships and 
lans for adult camp to be held July 

-August 13, when entertainment for 
businessgirls will be featured. 


One of the most profitable classes 
being conducted at Camp Highland 
is that in social dancing, whereby 
young girls are taught correct steps 
and the proper methods of leading 
and following. Every Wednesday aft- 
ernoon Miss Ann Johnson teaches a 
tap class. Miss Johnson, of the Uni- 
versity of .Georgia, a pupil of Jack 
Rand and a former pupil of the La 
Fontaine school, also assists with 
land sports and stunts. 

Carrying forward the aim that 
every camper shall learn to dance the 
right way, Miss Jacque Poole  con- 
ducts classes in social dancing and 
gives interpretations of aesthetic 
steps. These lessons are climaxed 
each Saturday evening by a well- 
planned no-break dance, which proves 
highly enjoyable both for campers 
and week-end guests. 

As the Y. W. C. A. desires for 
every girl a wholesome, happy vaca- 
tion in the country, regardless of re- 
duced budgets, special arrangements 
are made whereby church’ groups, 


missionary é6ocieties, Sunday school 
classes, civic clubs and individuals 
may donate campships. A very nom- 
inal fee makes it possible for a girl 
to stay at Highland for a week and 
enjoy a full round of entertainment, 
and the democratic spirit prevailing 
at camp assures a jolly welcome for 
girls and women of all ages and 
types. Full particulars about this 
arrangement may be made by calling 
the Y. W. C. A., Walnut 8961. 

Among those registered at Camp 
Highland for the week are Misses 
Antoinette Hunnicutt, Mary Jane 
Walker, Lorraine Moore, Tacy Moore, 
Carolyn Daniel, Anne Neibling, Al- 
lene Crawford, Sara White, uise 
Thompson, Jeanne Alexander, Anne 
Carte, Virginia Carothers, Gloria 
McClesky, Jacquelin McWhite. Mil- 
dred McMullen, Charlotte Matthews, 
Jeanne Matthews, Barbara Henry, 
Dorothy Henry. Barbara’ Britton, 
Phyllis Cheney, Madeline Seville, Hen- 
rietta Black, Marietta, Ga.; Louvera 
Ivey, Caroline Taylor, Elsie Kennon,, 
Virginia Hudson, Martha Hudson, 
Jacqueline Little, Virginia Wallace, 
Ruth Pollard. 

Others registered are Misses Joyce 
Berg, Julia Wing. Beatrice Gallaher, 
Becky Benton, Marguerite Rogers, 
Catherine Crabbe, Dorothy See, Clyde 
Smith, Mary Nelle Holland, Martha 
Ann Smith, Ruth Maddox. Mary Ruth 
Senter, Nettie Sne Wardlaw. Louise 
Hooks, Dora Elliott, Ruth Cochran, 
Sara Luce and Carolyn Day, Robert 
Lightfoot and Peggy Howell. of Alex- 
ander City, Ala.: Jessie Pridmore, 
Catherine and Helen Roy Pridmore, 
Greenville, S. C 


Rose Ring Club. 


The Rose Ring Club held its bi- 
weekly meeting at the home of Mrs. 
Emmett Quinn on Georgia avenue 
Wednesday. 

Mrs. Quinn was elected president; 
Mrs. Joe Robinson, secretary-treasur- 
er, and Mrs. George Mooney, report- 
er. The members attending included 
Mesdames Jack Holder, Emmett 
Quinn, Joel McGuire, J. R. Ridge- 
way, Joe Robinson and George F. 
Mooney. Visitors present were Mrs. 
T. P. Poole and Mrs. R. L. Seigel, of 
Miami, Fla. Prizes were won by 
Mrs. Mooney. 


-_- -—— 


Culbertson on Contract 
By ELY OULBERTSON, 


World's Champion Player and Greatest 
Card Analyst. 


a 


Applied Card-Reading. 


SOCIETY 
EVENTS 


ai. 


MONDAY, JUNE 25. 


Mrs. Robert Strickland Jr., will be 
hostess at luncheon at the Pied- 
mont Driving Club honoring Miss 
Claire Hanner. 


Wylie Arnold will be honored at 
a stag dinner given by his 
groomsmen. 


Mr. and Mrs. Alex Smith Jr., will 
entertain at a buffet supper fol- 
lowing the wedding rehearsal of 
Miss Agnes Kendrick Gray and 
William Francis Ronald, of Day- 
tona Beach, Fla. 


Mrs. W. D. Paschal will enituntaie 
at tea at her home on King’s 


highway in Decatur, in compli- 
ment to her guest, Mrs. Herbert 


‘lege. will feature the French program 
‘to be held Tuesday afternoon, June 
|26, at 4 o'clock, in 103 Theology 


‘achieve for the workers of this coun- 


knowledge their differences. 
| try better conditions: for which I have 


Not to acknowledge them weakens 
the case. Their physical functions in 


Many bridge players love to talk 
about card-reading and it is frequent- 


America. A. reception was held on 
board. They will make their home in 
Pelham. N. Y. 


nesday morning. 
Miss Hightower is a charming and 


The officers’ committee of the At- 
She finish- 


lanta League of Women Voters 
meets at 10:30 o'clock at league 
headquarters. 


Business Woman's Circle of Ep- 
worth Methodist church meets at 
the church this evening at 7:30 
o’clock. 

West End W. C. T. U. meets at 
2:30 o'clock at Eventide, 891 
West End avenue. 


Business and professional group of 
the woman's council of the Peach- 
tree Christian church meets at 
the church at 6:15 o'clock. 


Group meetings of the woman's 
council of the East Point Christian 
church take place today. 


The executive board of Druid 
Hills Baptist W. M. S. meets at 
the church at 10:30 o'clock. 


The W. M. S. of the Western 
Heights Baptist church meets 
this afternocen. The Y. W. A.’s 
will meet at the church this eve- 
ning. 


Atlante alumnae of Alpha Omicron 
Pi meets at 2:45 o'clock at the 
home of Mrs. James H. Taylor 
Jr.; 362 Manor Ridge drive, 
N. W. 


Gste City Chapter No. 233, O. E. 
S., meets this evening at 8 o'clock 
in the Knights of Pythian hall, 
on Peachtree street. 


Fulton Chapter No. 181, O. E. S. 
meets this evening at 8 o'clock 
in the Masonic temple, East Point, 
Georgia. 


Capital City Chapter No. 111, O. 
S., meets this evening at 
o'clock at the Fraternity hall, 
423 1-2 Marietta street, N. W. 


W. M. S. of Antioch Baptist church 


meets this evening. 


oe es 


| For Periodic Ailments | 


‘building at Emory University. 
|is one in the series of weekly pro- 


Wiis. ; 


more, 


This 


grams being held on Tuesday and 
Thursday afternoons as part of the 
Institut Francais, the special school 
of French being conducted at Emory 
this summer. The oublic is invited 
to all these programs, and at previous 


| meetings, a large attendance of repre- 
| sentative Atlantans has been noted. 


A short one-act play, “Un Bureau 


de Telegraphe,” will tbe performed by 
Carlos Lynes 
_institut, and by Dr. Mary Louise Por- 
‘ter and Miss Mary Radford, students 
at the institut this summer. 
ical program will be presented by Mrs. ; 

‘ ‘ | WAS 
Mrs. John M. isas son| Mesdames Wilbur 


president of the Alliane> Francaise,| Bluff, Ark.; George Vumlin, John ©. 
| Kirkpatrick, 


Jr., instructor in the 


A musi- 


S. G. Stukes, 
contralto. 


Well-known 


will preside, 


- 


Biltmore Guests. 
Among the guests.at the Biltmore 


IL. I. Jones. of Canton: Mr. 


Hattie Hardy. of Albany: F. 
Spencer Pease, of Milwaukee, 
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sheffield, 


of Indianapolis. Ind.: James W. Cox 


| Jr.. Miss Jean Egart. of Atlanta: Miss 
| Alice Thompson, of Knoxville, Tenn. ; | 
| Miss 

| Tenn. ; 
| Helene Hendricks, of Washington. D. 
iC.: Mies E. 
| Bernice 
'combe, 
| Washington. 
| Peddicord, | 
Nellie Lewis. of Baltimore. Md.: Miss | 


of Knoxville, 
Miss 


Nelle Janssen, 
Miss C. L. Murphy, 


Elizabeth Lyman, Miss 
Thomas. Miss Evelyn Hol- 
Miss Elizabeth O'Meard. of 
D. C.: Miss 
of Baltimore, Md.: 
Martha M. Bean. of Washington, D. 
(.; Miss Fura Hastlett. of Alexan- 
dria, Va.: Miss Grace Alban, of Balti- 
Md.: Miss Jean Austin, 
Baltimore, Md.: Mr. and Mrs. Jerry 
MeQnuade, of New York city. 


Kinnett—Vaughn. 


} 


A marriage of interest to a host of 
friends is that of Miss Mary Eleanor 
Kinnett and Edgar Albert Vaughn 
which was solemnized Thursday eve- 
ning, the eeremony having been per- 
formed br Dr. M. D. Collins at his 


home in Fairburn in the presence of | 


a few close friends. 
The bride 


Vaughn and the late Mr. Vaughn, of 


Fairburn. 
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn 
their home in Fairburn. 


will make 


Personals 


John S. Cohen Jr.. New York city; 


Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Custer, Salem, N. 


Pa.: 
| Wilson, N. 
| Terrace. 


Mrs. Leo Heintz. Melrose Park, 
Mr. and Mrs. FE. T. Dickinson, 
C., are at the Georgian 


| 
' 


are Miss Grace Milne. of Chattanooga, | 
—! George F. Hoffman, of Savan- | 
i; Nan, . 
and Mrs. John P. Powell. of Griffin; 
 W. R. John, of Johnveon City, Tenn.; 
'H. A. Horan, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; 
| Miss 
| M. Bodenverfer. of Milwaukee, Wis.: 


Elizabeth | 
M ins 


of | 


is the daughter of Mr. | 
and Mrs. A. C. Kinnett, of East Point, | 
Mr Vaughn is the son of Mrs. J. E. 


| 
| 


| 


’ 


e3% 


Dr. and Mrs, William Minnich ar- | 


rive in Atlanta on Tuesday to make 
'their home with Dr. and Mrs. J. F. 


|Paullin. parents of 


i'vgia Caravans. 


‘‘They Stopped 


Mrs. Minnich. 
They resided in Boston during the past | 


year. 
st? 


Miss Lucile Brown left Thursday 
fer a tour of the west with the Geor- 


sks 
Mrs. J. CC: Cobb has returned from 
a six weeks’ trip to Michigan = and 
Canada. She spent two weeks at the 


would like to change 


4 of Royal York hotel in Toronto, later £0- | 
the Patan’? | ise to detroit via. Niazara Falls. | 


| 
“I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Tablets 
feel very weak and had such awful 
pains that I couldn’t stay up. I had to 
go to bed every month. I read about 
the Tablets in one of your booklets | 
and I bought a bore. 
They stopped the pain.” — 
Mes. Odilon Labbe, 98 Lin- 
codn Street, Lewtston, Maine. 


LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S | 
TABLETS 


i'meriy of Atlanta. 
for painful menstruation. I used to | tg 


‘and Mrs. J. E. Haile, of Cedartown, 
/ are on 
Visit Chicago, Detroit and other sec- | 
tions before retu 


in Detroit she was the guest 
Mrs. E. C. Pratt, for- 


While 
of her sister. 


Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Telferd. Mr. 


a western tour. They will 


rning. 
see 


Weaver. of Dawson, is at | 


Jimmie 


the Crawford W. Long hospital where | or stamps (coins preferred) tor this | honor guest. 
he underwent an operation on Satur-| Lillian Mae pattern. 
|name, address and style number. 


dar. He is the son of Mrs. James D. 
eens of Dawson, formerly of At- 
anta. 


LIGHT SKIN NOW 


No waiting for results when you use. 
Black and White Bleaching Cream. 
Whitens and lightens the darkest skin, 


in one-half time because it’s double- 


A Tonic and Sedative for Women 


| 50c. Sold on money-back guarantee. 


strength. Safe, gentle. Large opal jar, 


| inch fabric. 


| Atlanta, Ga. 


attended St. 
N: W.. ° and 


The bride 
school. Peekskill, 
studied at the Metropolitan - Art 
school. Mr. Reppert went to New 
York University. He is now assaciat- 
ec] wtih the American Hard Rubber 


Mary's 
later 


Company. 


-_ --—-_-— 


Miam) Visitor Feted. 

Mrs. J. W. McCrory entertained at! 
luncheon Saturday, honoring her 
guest, Mrs. I.eo Browne, of Miami, 
Fla. The table had for a centerpiece 
a basket of pink roses and ferns, and 
the color scheme of nink and green 
carried out. (Guests included 


Baker, Pine | 


of 


B..C.' Broyles, A. H.}| 
Word, Grover Megahee, W. R. Word, | 
J. €C. Cobb and Miss Jennie Word. 


Lillian M ae Patterns 


yy 
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& , 


nna atest 
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Se 
SSN oe ale a ee 
. oF os ates “ens “n'a te tae 


xe 


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he 


Wt 


St 
SS SS 
ee 


STAM 


< 
LAS 


RIES SSA: Je: eS 


oF 
COTTON FROCKS? | 
Pattern 1762. 
How are you fixed for cotton frocks | 


‘this summer? Don’t answer too quick- | 


' 


sweltering days 
every woman) 
several times 
in the inter- 
look at the 
tw> more | 


those 
when 


ly! 
to 


Think 


come 


of 


and often has to, 
est of daintiness. Then 
pattern. Wouldn't one or 
frocks like this be a chic safeguard? 
Remember, they are the simplest 
thing in the world to make! Did you 
ever see so much style crowded into | 
one detail as that clever yoke man- | 


/ages to combine in its tabbed front, 


long shoulder lines, 
point at the back? 
Pattern 1762 is available in 


and the clever | 


sizes | 


| 14, 16, 18. 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and | 
42. Size 16 takes 31-4 yards of 36-/0) West Peachtree in, honor of her 


Illustrated step-by-step | 
sewing instructions included. | 
Send fifteen cents (15c) in coins) 


Write plainly | 
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sure to state size. 


accessories | 
in the 


summer. Order your copy of this hel 
ful new summer book. Price of 
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p- | 
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Address orders to Lillian Mae Pat-. 
tern Department, 


‘democracy, in which the best of op-| had 
‘portunity is available to every child | not always necessary to lose every- 
‘and where the compensations of life) 
are not purely material ones, then we 
may indeed be seeing the realization 


‘of a really New Deal for the people. 


i that 


‘one thing on 
smells like something else when you | 


for a motor trip. They will spend a 
| The smartest warm weather fash-|few days in Asheville, N. C., going 
ions, the newest fabrics and the sum-/jater to Bristol, Va., where they wil! 
'mer season’s outstanding . : 
‘are illustrated and described 
inew Lillian Mae Pattern Book for} 


book, | Cooper, taught together at Martin Col- 


worked all my life,” she is not stay- 
ing because she will gain anything 
materially, for herself or her friends, 
but because she sees an opportunity 
for government to render a permanent 
service to the general happiness of the 
working man and woman and their 
families. 

This is what we mean as I see it 
by the “New Deal.” Look carefully, 
O people, at the record of some of 
your public servants in the past few 
years! Does this attitude strike you 
as new? If so, the women are in 
part responsible for it, and I think | 
at present we can count on a more| 
active interest from them and a con-) 
stantly increasing willingness to bear’ 
their proper share of the burdens of | 


government, 


Now for the dreams of the future: 

If women are really going to awake | 
to their civie duties, if they are going: 
to accept changes in social living and | 
try to make of this country a_real| 


If this is to come true, it seems to me 
that the women have got to learn to! 
work together even before they work | 


They cannot 


that have to be solved. 
simply be- 


accept certain doctrines 
cause they sound well. 
I have often thought that it sound- 
ed so well to talk about women being 
on an equal footing with men and 
sometimes when I have listened to 
the arguments of the National Wom- 
ans’ party and they have complained 
they could not compete in the) 
labor market because restrictions were | 
laid unon women's work which were 


‘not laid upon men's, I have been al- 


most inclined to agree with them that 
such restrictions were unjust, until 


life. are different and perhaps in the 
same way the contributions which they 
are to the spiritual side of life are 
different. 

I have a friend who wrote me the 
other day saying that because she and 
her husband lost all of their money, 
they have been obliged to go and live 
in a rural community in a small farm- 
house. She and her daughters are 
doing all their own work and they 
have chosen the community .in which 
they are living not because they found 
a house which they liked, but because 
they found a school for the children 
that they felt would give a real edu- 
cation* After the school was found, 
they found the house. She adds: “I 
do not regret the money—it has been 
a marvelous experience, giving my 
children a true sense of values and I 
have learned what real people my 
country neighbors are.” 

There are many people who may 
make this same discovery and it is 


thing in order to make it. but it is 
necessary to attain the vision of a 
new and different life. 

I was reading lately a book whieh 
Ramsay McDonald wrote about his 
wife, who died in 1911 and who seems 
today to be alive as one reads the 


‘with men, and they have got to be | pages of the book. She was far ahead 


realistic in facing the social problems, 


of her time in many ways, but her 
most striking characteristic, from 
youth up, was the feeling of not being 
able to live in comfort when so many 
others suffered. 

Many women in this country have 
been carrying on similar work and 
perhaps we are going to see evolved 
in the next few years not only a so- 
cial order built by the ability and 
brains of our men, but a social or- 


‘der which also represents the under- 


standing heart of the women. 
Tomorrow: Women and Careers. 
(Coprright, 1084. for 
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt from her book, 
“It's Up to the Women.’’) 


NCS 


ee 


a Myebe lf 


‘It’s the Hot Weather That 


Suggests Fine Toilet Waters 


By MIGNON. 

In hot weather purses just natural- | 
ly fly open at the sight of delicate 
toilet waters. There isn't anything 
that is nicer after a bath than a slap- 
ping on of a perfumed eau de cologne 
or toilet water, which usually comes 
in shaker-top bottles that are easy 
to handle. 

1. I can tell you of a lily of the 
valley if you like a sweet bouquet. 
It's not heavy and it is a true valley 
lily aroma, about which you can have 
no doubt. It isn’t the kind that says 
the bottle and then 


pour it out. Ever buy one like that? 
2. There is another very delicate) 
scent that pleases me no end. It’s as | 
true a narcissus as l've found and | 
has a summer freshness about it that. 
is most desirable. 

3. There is another violet frazrance, | 


with that woodsy smell you leve in 


summer, reminiscent of lavender and, 


old lace. The name is lovely, espe- 


cially if you are making a gift. That! 


and the package make so much dif-| 


ference when you are giving a pres-| 


ent. The imagination should be 


thoroughly intrigued. 


4. Another toilet water (and none 
of these are extravagant ones, but 
something within the reach of almost 
every woman), is a lyilac that smells 
like the countryside after a coo] rain. 
Very, very nice! 

The same manufacturer makes 
a blended scent of something I 
couldn’t for the life of me describe, 
except that it is not very marked— 
just'a something with an indefinably 
gentle bouquet. It doesn’t smell like 
flowers, either. You’ve had, at some 
time, a face powder so lovely and so 
faintly scented that you have wished 
you could find a perfume and _ toilet 
water like it. Well—this is the kind 
of toilet water you were looking for. 
Try it. 


If you want to know where you 
ean purchase any article mentioned 
in this column, phone Mignon, at The 
Constitution office. Please do not 
write unless you live outside the city, 
in which case inclose a stamped, self- 


addressed envelope. 


(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


Mrs. Scott Given 
Farewell Party. 


Mrs. Rebecca Cooper entertained 
with a luncheon Friday at her home 


daughter, Mrs. L. D. Scott. Covers 
were laid for six close friends of the 


Mr. and Mrs. Scott leave Sunday 


visit Dean and Mrs. Metts. of Sul- 
lins College. Mrs. Metts and Mrs. 
Scott, the former Miss Marguerite 


Later Mr. and 
to Deltavilie. | 


lege, Pulaski, Tenn. 
Mrs. Scott will drive 


The Constitution, | Va.. to visit Mr. Scott's father at his| Holeombe Jr.. 
‘home on the Chesapeake bay. i 


Buds of Promise 
Class Entertained. 


The Buds of Promise class of the 
intermediate department of the Bap- 
tist Tabernacle Sunday school was en- 
tertained Thursday evening at the 
home of Miss Mary Sorman on Belle 


Meade avenue. 

Contests were enjoyed, the prizes 
being won by Mrs. +. E. Tatum Jr., 
Jimmie Hoffman and Emory Hol- 
combe Jr. The hostess was assisted 
in entertaining by her mother, Mrs. 
Roy Gorman, and sister, Miss Fran- 
ces Gorman, 

Those present were Mrs. J. E. Ta- 
tum Jr.. Misses Mary Storey, Mary 
Morris, Marjorie Irwin, Martha Sor- 
man and J. E. Tatum Jr., Jimmie 
Hoffman, L. B. Storey Jr., Emory 

Charles Gafner and 
Floyd Lamb Jr. 


talented young woman. 
ed Nelson high school, received a de- 
gree from G. S. C, W., did graduate 
work at Columbia University, and 
studied at Charleston Museum. She 
is head of the science department in 
the Berkshire Museum,  Pittsficld, 
Mass. . 

Saturday afternoon Mrs. J. K. 
Watt gave a miscellaneous shower for 
the bride-elect. Sunday afternoon 
Miss Hightower’s parents held open 
house between 4 and 6, and on Mon- 
day, Miss Laura Baker, Mrs. Me- 
Garrity and Mrs. J. C. Hightower 
will entertain the bride-elect with a 
rook party. Miss Alex Anderson will 
give a buffet supper in honor of Miss 
Hightower Tuesday. 


~_-—— 


Styles by Annette 


The Constitution by | 


SSSR Manad 


CAPTIVATING JACKET ENSEM- 

BLE—COOL SLEEVELESS 
DRESS. 

A very clever and captivating model 
is this ensemble, and one which can 
serve two purposes. 

You've a cool sleeveless dress for 
casual daytime wear. Slip into your 
jacket, and you have an entirely dif- 
ferent looking outfit to wear to town 
or for spectator sports. 

f made of white tub silk as 
sketched with the jacket and trim of 
the dress of white printed in yellow 
and brown, a stunning rig is the re- 
sult. 

All in the same color as in pastel 
blue or ice-cream pink tub silk or 
linen, it’s adorable. 

Tablecloth -plaided linen, 
cottons, pique print, checked secrsuck- 
er, etc., are other smart suitable 
fabrics. 

Style No. 390 is designed in sizes 
14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches 
bust. 

Size 16 requires 21-4 yards of 35- 
inch material with 23-8 yards of 35- 
inch contrasting. 

The Essence of Fashion! 

The whole fashion story is to be 
found in this new and exciting large 
fashion book. You certainly won’t 
want to mise it. Contains new Holly- 
wood photos and patterns that are 
styled perfectly and fit perfectly. 
Send for your copy today! 

Price of book, 15 cents. 

Price of pattern, 15 cents in 
stamps or coin (coin preferred). Wrap 
coin carefully. 


Mail orders to Annette Pattern De- 
‘partment, The Constitution, Atlan- 
jta, Ga, 


ly the case that a player can place 
certain cards in the hand of one ad- 
versary or another. Often the knowl- 
edge is valueless so far as making 
the contract is concerned, but there 
are many situations in which accu- 
rate reading of the opponents’ distri- 
bution and high cards is essential to 
the success of the contract. 

Mr. Samuel Fry Jr., on the hand 
below, not only accurately read West's 
distribution and early in the hand 
the location of an important high 
card, but by means of this informa- 


tion made his game contract. 
South, dealer. 
East and West vulnerable; 
score 60. 


part- 


The bidding: (Figures afte) 
bids refer to numbered explan 
atory paragraphs.) 


South West North East 


1y 1A(1) 2f(2) 26(3) 
20(4) Pass 49 (5) Pass 
Pass Pass 


1—This vulnerable overeall is justi- 
fied by the possesion of the six- 
ecard suit and the hope that the 
club king may be favorably placed. 
2—North has, of course, enough 
strength for a free bid. 
3—East, with a seven-card suit and 
a partner strong enough to over- 
call, rightly shows his diamond 
because 


suit. 
his 
suit. 


4—-South  rebids 

strong trump 

5—After South rebids, North's hand 
is plenty strong enough to raise 
to game. 

West opened his singleton diamond 
in response to his partner’s bid, and 
East cashed the ace and king of dia- 
monds. He did not lead another dia- 
mond, because he felt sure that his 
partner could not overruff the dum- 
my, but led the spade 8, upon which 


of 


the queen. The retention of the queen 
was deliberate, based upon the fact 
that it might be needed to throw 
West into the lead later in the hand. 
Mr. Fry took two rounds of trumps, 
then made the club finesse and re- 
turned to his own hand with the last 
trump in dummy to run two more 
rounds of trumps and the diamond 
jack. West had been forced to find 
four discards, and had elected to bare 
down to the spade king. A spade was 
then led from dummy, and West 
thrown in the lead, and the.contract 
was fulfilled because he was then 
compelled to lead to the tenace in 
clubs—the ace-seven in dummy and 
the jack-four in the closed hand. 

The play of the hand is both ac- 
curate and logical, and it is of course 
observable that no other plan could 
have succeeded against accurate de- 
f , 

TOMORROW'S HAND. 
East, dealer. 
East and West vu nernble. 


shirting | 


5 4 
4332 
The hand will be discussed in to- 
morrow’s article. 
(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


Mr. Culbertson will be very 
glad to answer questions on 
bridge. Please inclose a stamped 
(3-cent), self-addressed envelope 
and address your question to Ely 
Culbertson, in care of The Atlanta 
Constitution. 


Crawford, of Macon. 


Mrs. E. M. Godat will entertain at 
tea this afternoon at her home on 
Amsterdam avenue. 


Miss Judy Roundtree 
Is Honor Guest. 


Miss Judy Roundtree, popular Fitz- 
gerald debutante, was honored at a 
party given by James D. Brooks and 
his mother, Mrs. J. D. Brooks, at 
their home on Capitol square. Miss 
Roundtree has been honor guest to 
several other affairs since she has 
been visiting her relatives here. The 
party consisted of several games and 
contests. One amusing game was a 
butter bean hunt aroufd the capitol 
lawn. The Trinity Senior and Young 
Peoples’ department were well repre- 
sented. 

Guests were Misses Judy Roundtree, 
Jane Shropshire, Louise Tomlinson, 
Margie Hollehan, Helen Brvant, Rose- 
mary NSpeir. Melha Hall. Mary Laun- 
ius, Virginia Roberts, Louise Stone, 
Sarah Carroll, Helen Thomason and 
Raeva Coleman, Mrs. Mamie B. Free- 
man, Mrs. Ruth Johnson Norton, and 
James D. Brooks, Tommy Raines, Joe 
Burns, Roy Elrod, P. A. Smith, Je- 
rome Joiner, Eugene Blackburn. Har- 
ry Blackburn, Joe Body, Paul Patter- 
son, Pat McClellan. Buddy Thomas, 
George Seckinger, Valco Lyle, Hugh 


Mr Fry played the four rather than’ 
|F. Nixon on Floyd avenue Wednes- 


Carroll, Bob Chandler, Mr. and Mrs. 
Joseph B. Harrison and Mr. and Mrs. 
'Glynne Thomas. 


Mrs. Hable Honored. 


Mrs. Ruby Hopkins, worthy matron 
of Capital City Chapter No. 111, O. 
FE. S.. was honored Saturday at a 
surprise luncheon at Rich's tea room 
by the officers and members of Cap- 
ital City chapter. Mrs. Myrtice Beat- 
tie served as hostess and the invoca- 
tion was given by Mrs. Mary Almand, 

Mrs. Honkins was presented with 
a lovely gift from her officers and 
members. Those present were Mes- 
dames Ruby Hopkins, R. T. Hopkins, 
Myrtice Beattie, Mary Almand, Gail- 
ver Smith, Inez Timmie. Cleo Shaw, 
Fxer Styron, Alice Thurmond, Bee 
Bragg and Jane Lou Garmon. 


—_—_— --— 


Baptist Circle. 


Circle No. 1 of the Oakland City 
Baptist W. M. S. met with Mre. H. 


day afternoon. 

The devotional was given by Mrs. 
0. F. Webber. Splendid reports of 
personal service work were given. 

Those present were Mesdames Lewis 
Ashley, F. R. Ayers, G. V. Harvey. 
G. C. Gil. J. F. MeBride, C. M. 
Turner. E. D. Beckwith, G. L. Barnes, 
lL.. C. Peek. P. R. Manahan, T. L. 
Drum, H. F. Wilson, M. L. Irvin. 
IL. C. Chambless, E. L. Demarcus an 
O. F. Webber. , 


-—-——_— 


Auxiliary of O. R. C. 


Georgia Division No. 337, L. A. to 
O. R. C.. was entertained by Mra. 
R. Waller and Mrs. J. C. Aldredge 
at the home of Mrs. Waller in West 
End. Games were enjoyed during the 
afternoon. Those winning prizes were 
Mrs. C. E. Zachry and Mrs. Ora 
Reeves. The next meeting will he 
with Mrs. D. E. Boswell in Cascade 
Heights. 


How Cardui Benefits 
Middle Life Troubles; 
Strengthens Women 


“T was in a weak and run-down 
condition, passing through the change 
of life,” writes Mrs. Nannie Bunnell, 
of Waco, Texas. “My appetite was 
poor and I was restless at night. One 


day, I decided to try Cardui. After 
my first bottle, I felt better and 
stronger. I continued taking it until 
I had taken six bottles, after which I 
felt well on tHe road to recovery.” ... 
During the change of life, a woman 
should be strengthened against the 
major changes that are taking place. 
Take Cardui. . Thousands of women 


(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 
o 


‘testify Cardui benefited them. If it 
| does not benefit YOU, consult «8 
physician.—(adv.) 


Peo 
spi Ct 


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THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934. 


THE GUMPS—A HINT TO THE FEEBLE MINDED 


POOR OLD BIMBO— IS 


GO FISHING~ 
BURNIED— 


HE DISGUSTED 


With 

THIS TRIP—HE CAN'T SLEEP ON ACCOUNT 

OF THE MOSQUITOES, ‘THE 

‘ AGREE WITH HIM-AND AJ 
HE’s so 


FOOD DOESN'T 
OW HE CAN'T 


AND WHAT WAS THA 
LINIMENTT XOU GANE - 


HIM FOR HIS SUN- 
| BURN? IT MUST 

PANT 
REMOVER fs 

IN 1T— y (iy 


a 


ITTLE 


1 LEAPIN’ LIZARDS! 


i] § HAD NO’ IDEA 
M {tT WAS -SO LATE- 
WHY, IT’S "WAY 
PAST BED-TIME= 


iI | 
Ail 


iT. YOU MAY ATTEMPT 
TO EXPLAIN WHY YOU 
DION'T PAY MY FINE 
BEFORE AND LEFT ME 
IN THAT DUMP OFA 
PIAILS OVER THE 


tt 


— | 
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ANDO WHILE YOu'RE DOING 


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my AND SECONDLY 

Y LORD AND LADY 

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LOTS OF WORK FOR YO 
MY DEAR- AND YOu , 


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1 JUST 
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THINKING OF YOUR COMFORT 
SWEETHEART, WHILE 1 WAS 
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COOKING MY OWN MEALS 
WITH YOU IN YOUR NICE 


WHICH MEANS WORK, 
COOL JAIL. y/ 


AND f BELIEVE, 
MY TREASURE 


SOMETHING 
FOR THAT 


; HEADQUARTERS OF JERRY 
OMARRA'IS ALITO-STEALING RING. 


SAYS SHE'S 
TAKINIG HER 
BUSINESS BACK- 


AS | SAID BEFORE, BOYS- 
IVE COME BACK TO TAKE 
OVER. MY OLD BUSINESS ANID 
FROM NOW OWN, I'M THE BOSS. 
WHEN 1 CAME UP HERE, | 
THOUGHT JERRN MIGHT LIGTEN 


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WASH THE 
KITCHEMS FLOOR, 

SMVTTY 


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HOWDY MAM 


= he. YOUR NEIGHBORS 


—_— 


AND WHEANS 
YoOVE FINISHED 
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CARRY ALL THE RUBRISH 
ODT To -THE BACK 


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FOLK WHO COME UP 


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Today's Cross Word Puzzle 


—_ 


YOU HELP ME '! MY YUN) —! THINK You 
ARM AIN'T SO LONG AS DE MUST HAVE 
OTHER VUN — SEE me 


ACROSS dawn. 
1 Equal. 
6 Mould. 
9 Duffer’s handi- 
work. 
14 Nimble. 
‘5 Narrow inlet. 
16 Originate. 
17 Coming back. 
19 Turkish gov- 
ernment. 
20 Dig up. 
21 European 
thrushes: var. 
23 Night: French. 
, 24 S-shaped 
worm, 
| 25 Salutation. 
26, Goddess of 
am 


ae 


article, 


MADE A 
MISTAKE ! | 


face. 

41 Orifice. 

33 Bent. 

37 Joins. 

40 Solo parts: 
mus. 

41 Uncanny. 


44 Vestige. 

46 Feminine 
fabulous 
Winged mon- 


abbr. 


| 


28 Spanish plural 
29 A slippery sur- 


43 Eight: prefix. 


ster. 
48 Well bred man: 


50 World War 
Flanders town. 

51 Tree juice, 

53 Gazelle of 
Tibet. 


50 Air: combining 


form. 

56 Mature. 

59 Something 
bent to hold 
an object. 

61 Urge strongly. 
Cross a stream 
by wading. 

64 A famous 
doctor. 

66 Thrived. 

68 County in 
Colorado. 


/ 9 


69 Own: Scot. 


70 The mallow 
plant of tropi- 
cal America. 

71 Cup: French 

72 French plural 
article. 

73 Bay horses 
with white 
markings. 

DOWN 
1 Brink: poet. 


2 Inclosed fields: 


law. 

3 Roman em- 
peror. 

4 Cudgel. 

5 Pronoun. 


ae | 


ea 


l6 


9 


WHAT YOU WANT 
IS A DOCTOR! 
I'M AFRAID YOU'RE 


IN THE WRONG 
Se 


| 


== NO, NO! DON'T 


MAKE FOOL 


YOUR AD SAY RIGHT 
HERE - “SHORTHAND 
IMPROVED “ !! 


6 Divided into 
three parts. 
7One: German. 
8 Predatory bird. 
9 Dip slightly 
into water. 
10 Handcuff. 
11 Acrimony. 
12 Sea resort and 
excavated 
town near 
Rome. 
13 Pries: Scot. 
18 Tyro. 
22 Interjection : 
var. 
25 A beverage. 
27 Sun. 
29 Cut into thin 


pieces. 

30 One of an Irish 
breed of cattle. 

32 Jungle beasts. 

33 Suffix denoting 
agency. 

34 Negative con- 
junction. 

35 Staffs for 
hanging 
banners. 

36 Harmonies of 


tone. 

38 Knights: abbr. 

39 Ship's call. 

42 Exit. 

45 Strong, useful 
wood of East 
Indies. 

17 Above: poet. 

49 Summit. 

o1 Sprout. 

52 Italian city. 

34 Founder of 
Empire of 
Hungary. 

6 Large artery. 

457 Immature. 

58 Collections of 
Icelandic lit- 
erature. 

$0 Greek malig- 
nant spirits. 

K2 Large lake. 

63 Criminal: 
English law. 

85 Eggs of fish. 


67 Equality, as to 


value, 


———e—O ee 


RESTLESS WOMEN 
BY JANE DIXON 


—— 


‘landt of the skit was from Chicago 


INSTALLMENT XXXI. | 


She hoped Steve would be standing 
watch downstairs, but he was nowhere 
in sight. She lingered as long as she 
dared, then took a taxi to Twelfth 
street. It did not oceur to Sandra 
that Steve, having judged the charac- 
ter of the affair from arriving guests, 
concluded she was safe and had gone 
about his business. 


Mrs. Reynal and Valerie were to 
be at Chez Clement. A _ radiogram 
from her mother ordered Sandra to 
“come to us at once.” Sandra smiled 
when she read it. If there was one 
thing Corinne did better than another 
it was to issue orders. 

Rehearsals for the new skit were 
dragging, particularly this morning. 
The girl who was the Bubbles Court- 


and had a nasal twang that shredded 
the nerves. 

“Listen, Reynal,”’ Al Hart confided 
when the director had put them 
through one piece so many times San- 
dra’s brain swam. “give the dame a 
lift, will you? She's got a friend 
who's put boocoo jack in the show. 
He wants to shine her up for a go 
at the Four Hundred. She got her 
training in South Chicago or a Cicero 
cabaret.” 

“I'll do what I can,” Sandra prom- 
ised, “between the ‘aints’ and the 
‘lousies’.”’ 

Al Hart groaned. “For the love of 
Mike why didn’t her sugar daddy send 
her to a finishing school? This is a 
show, not a training camp. Honest. 


I’ve heard the king’s English man- 
gled, but this Chicago baby pulver- 
izes it.” 

Sandra thought of what the success 
or failure of the skit meant to Steve. 
During the next run she studied the 
girl from Chicago. The girl was am- 
bitious and she was frightened. Be- 
yond her depth and knew it. Finish- 
ing school, Al Hart had said. Sandra 
sought her out. 

“Thank heavens this isn’t a cabaret 
scene or I'd be feeling exactly as you 
are.” Sandra said. 

The girl from Chicago raised her 
head cupped in her two hands. “It’s 
a lotta bad news,” she said. “I’m off 
my beat.” 

“But you're not.” Sandra laid a 
friendly hand on the girl's shoulder. 
“It's simply that you don't get the 
picture. Just as I couldn't get your 
picture. You see, I've had lots of, 
worldly training. For example— 
there’s a school in France, costs a 
lot of money, but you'd be surprised 
how many people worth knowing can 
afford that kind of school. I studied 
there myself before the family for- 
tune went on the rocks. The trouble 
is that the school has a long waiting 
list.” 

“Herman, he’s my guardian, y’un- 
derstand,” Miss Chicago confided, 
“told me you was a swell and to get 
acquainted. I like goin’ around where 


Aunt Het 


MT rl 


iT 


“A man always seems dumbest 
when he’s tryin’ to show off before 
his wife.” 

(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


SALLYS SALLIES 


1] rose. 


— 


I can have a good time an’ easy, but 
Herman's blotto on the heavy swells.” 
“Why not?’ Sandra laughed. “Just 
as easy to play the big time once 
you're trained for it.” 

“What's the name of that frog 
school you went to?” 

“Madame Rampier’s. I'll jot it 
down, You might tell your guardian 
about it, and maybe, if he is very 
influential, he could get you in. It's 
heaps of fun and not too much 
study.” 

“I don’t know why I take so much 
punishment,” Miss Chicago cupped 
her chin in her hands again. “I was 
having a swell time knocking them 
off their seats in the Palay Dor with 
a lotta croon songs and for no rea- 
son at all this guy—that’s the guard- 
lan Herman—comes along and in- 
sists on making a lady outta me.” 

“You are a lady,” Sandra _protest- 
ed. “Nine months at Rampier's would 
complete your course. It’s lots of fun, 
and you do meet the most wonderful 
people,” 

“Thanks for the tip.” Miss Chicago 
folded the paper on which Sandra had 
written the name of the schwel, slip- 
ped it in the top of her stocking. 
“Right now I could stand a lotta 
Paris or some place. This ‘pep’ troup 
So fast for a gal from the lake 
ront. 


On the way out Sandra stopped to | say. 


whisper to Al art. “I think Chi- 


cago is quitting. Give 


|ing again,” she moaned. 


| 
' 


| 


! 


| 


her part to! on Gil. 


“What a 
way for sister to greet sister. It 
does seem you might have enough re- 
spect for your mother to make her 
home-coming happy.” 

She's been playing around with 
Gil again,” Valerie choked. 

Mrs. Reynal raised jeweled hands. 
“Sandra!” she gasped. 


“Don’t swoon, mother,” Sandra 
said. She had lost interest in the 
mock-drama, wanted to get away from 
it as quickly and as quietly as pos- 
sible. “Val is merely having one of 
her frolics with the green-eyed mon- 
ster. I haven't been playing around 
with Gil. Though why Val should 
give a hoot, now she's divorced him, 
I don't make out.” 

“Divoreed her husband?’ Mrs, Rey- 
nal bridled. “But Valerie has done 


/nothing of the sort.” 


Val’s laughter pealed through the 
room, high-pitched, gloating. “That's 
one score on you, my clever Sandy!” 
she cried, 


Val had cheated Gil, then, about 
going to Paris for a divorce. Some 
day Gil or another man would stran- 
gle Val. Fasten their fingers in her 
perfect throat and still the lies that 
festered there. 

“Why not?” Sandra managed to 
She felt an actual physical re- 
vulsion toward Val. “The score is 
Be careful it doesn’t bounce 


Freddy Fordyce, the Queen of Dia-| back and hit you between the eyes.” 


monds. I know 
She’s the part except for 
stances. We'll rehearse 
You’ll be surprised.” 

Chez Clement was heavy with the 
mingled scent of costly perfumes, of 
rich fabrics. It was the quiet hour 
——too early for cocktails, Sandra hur- 
ried along with eyes straight. She 
had neither time nor taste for the 
idle chatter a meeting with an ac- 
quaintance entailed. 

boy in garnet livery. with more 
gold trappings than a Japanese ad- 
miral would rate, accompanied San- 
dra to suite 679. Sanda put her fin- 
ger on the bell. A solemn English 
butler answered. Sandra thought: 
Corinne is riding the high horse. 
“Happy days are here again.” 
The drawing room was abloom. A 


she can handle it. | 
circum- | 
together. | 


bowl of orchids on the table, a show- | 


ing of gardenias and many yellow 
roses in tall vases. Presently there 
was the light fall of feet. Valerie. 
She stopped on the threshold. 

“Hi, Sandy.” Valerie moved for- 
ward with the feline motion so char- 
acteristic of her. “How's the bud- 
ding Bernhardt?” 

“Good enough.” Sandra made ap- 
praisal of Valerie. Her beauty was 
ethereal. The pale rose was more 
fragile. A delicate flower on the 
slenderest of stems. ‘‘How’s mother?’ 

“As usual.” Val’s lips curled. “Still 
playing chess—with human pawns.” 

“Seems to be a family game,” San- 
dra said significantly. 

“Yes.” Valerie toyed with a yellow 
“Ever play?” 

“Look here, Val.” Sandra dug her 
fingers into the arms of the chair. 
“IT happen to be interested—even now 
that you are divorced.” 

Val observed herself and Sandra 
in an adjacent mirror. “Divorced?” 
she said. ‘Were you counting on it? 
You’ve seen Gilbert!” Valerie ac- 
cused. Her slant eyes were dashes of 
suspicion. 


“What then?’ Sandra met suspicion | 


with steel. 

“You've always wanted him,” Val- 
erie accused. 

“Don’t flatter yourself. If I had 
wanted him—oh, what's the use?” 

“T have him.” Valerie thrust her 
face close to Sandra's. 

“You mean you had him for a mo- 
ment. The least said about that mo- 
ment the better. As far as I’m con- 
cerned, he’s yours forever. Where's 
Corinne? I didn’t come here to 
fence.” 

“Why did you come?” 

“I’m wondering.” Sandra said and 
moved to go. She had risen when 
her mother came in, hurried to San- 
dra, embraced her with just the prop- 
er dramatic fervor. “My poor child,” 
Corinne murmured. “I’ve missed you 
so.” Then she felt electricity spark- 
ing in the air and drew back. 

“My daughters have been quarrel- 


“We will not discuss this unpleas- 
ant subject,” Mrs. Reynal announced 
with her customary finality. ‘“Va- 
lerie is taking a place at Soundview 
for the summer. It’s really a stun- 
ning choice—the Bolmar estate. The 
Belmars are summering abroad. You're 
to come with us, Sandra. The most 
desirable people are going to Sound- 
view this summer. There should be 
any number of eligible men.” 

“Sorry, darling.” Sandra pulled on 
her gloves. “I’m all signed up for 
the summer.” 


“You mean you've accepted an in- 
vitation—from the Courtlandts, per- 
haps. But that was before you knew 
about your sister’s plans. You must 


give your regrets.” 


“It isn’t that sort of invitation. I 
have been asked by a friend to play 


/a part in a skit he has written for 


+ Teme ‘Princess Pep.’ I've accept- 
ed. 

“But you can’t possibly remain in 
town during the summer. The heat— 
there’s“no one here.” 

“That sort of heat doesn’t bother 
me. I’m going to play the part in 
the skit.” 

“Oh, Sandy!” Valerie was all con- 
trition. “I’m horrid. Forgive me. 
It’s my nerves. They’re in shreds. 
Do tell me something about your 
work. And your writing friend. Is 
he interesting?” 

“Interesting to me. Most of my 
friends share my opinion.” Sandra 
felt the color mounting to her cheeks. 
It would not do for Val to notice the 
telltale flush. She strolled over to 
study a jade quartz lamp on a piano. 
How quickly the mention of a man 
brought Val to life! 

“Then you must bring him to dine 
with mother and me. And you must 
take me back stage with you sometime. 
I’ve never been.” 

“Thanks.” Sandra came back to 
her mother. “Have to hop along.” 
she said. “You're looking very fit, 
darling, and disgracefully young for 
a mother with two grown daughters.” 

“But surely, Sandra, you are dining 
with us—our first evening home?” 

“Can't. Food is bad for dancing. I 
sup after the show.” 

Mrs. Reynal raised her ringed hands 
in a gesture of futility. “Such a life 
for a well-bred girl,” she sighed. “Eat- 
ing at all hours.” 

Sandra laughed. “But mother. I’re 
been eating at all hours since I can 
remember. If all the buffets I've fed 
from after midnight were placed end 
to end they would reach—” 

“That has nothing to do with what 
you are eating now,” Mrs. Rernal 
said acidly. “There's one consolation, 
however, Raoul always did set an ex- 
cellent table.” 

Continued Tomorrow. 
(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


Any woman with a sharp wit is 
bound to be popular with her friends 
—unless she points it at them. 


JUST NUTS 


THE BANK Y IGNT THAT 
HAS RETURNED /SPLENDID! 
T cHECK! / WHAT CAN 
WE BLY 
WITH iT 
THIS TIME? 


j ve 


L 


y 


‘the men parted company and walked 


'Then with sticks they began to beat 
| the bushes. 


S 


| | UNCLE RAY’S CORNER 


PARENTS OF BARNYARD 
FOWLS. 

Three men in India wanted to catch 
jungle fowls. They went to a part 
of the jungle where there was a space 
not too crowded with plant life, and 
drove two stakes in the ground, about 
100 feet apart. A heavy cord was 
laid along the ground and tied to the 
stakes. 


Red jungle fowl of India, 


The next step was to fasten horse- 
hair ‘“‘nooses’’—about 50 of them—to 
the cord. When this was finished, 


to points a few hundred feet away. 


Dozens of jungle fowls were stirred 
from their hiding places. Some flew 
to limbs and perched out of reach, 
but others ran along the ground. Be- 
fore long, five of them were tangled 
in the nooses which had been set for 
them. 

That is a picture of a common 
method of capturing jungle fowls, 
Sometimes the nooses are set at a 
height of about 18 inches, and the 
birds are caught by their necks in- 


'were taken to Europe where 


stead of by their feet. 


Jungle fowls are ground birds, with 
colorful feathers. They dwell in 
bamboo jungles, thickets and forests 
of India, Burma, the extreme south 
of China and the East Indies. They 
can fly, but do much more running 
than flying, and never soar abore the 
trees. They lay their eggs on the 
ground, usually from 8 to 12 for 
each hatching; and they scratch the 
ground for food, feeding on roots, 
seeds, berries, worms and other tid- 
bits. The males crow, like the cock 
of the barnyard. 

It is believed that jungle fowls were 
the parents of most, if not all, of 
the barnyard fowls which we call 
chickens. They were caught and 
tamed in India and China more than 
3.000 years ago: and proved of high 
value because the hens kept on lay- 
ing eggs which people could use for 
food 


In the course of trade, tame fowls 
thev 
proved “popular’—for cock-fighting 
as well as for egg-laying. 

An English traveler, after watch- 
ing jungle fowls in a forest of India, 
reported: “They have the same habits 
as domestic poultry. The cock struts 
at the head of his hens, and keeps 
watch over their safety. When dis- 
turbed, he flies to a high branch and 
crows with all his might, while his 
dames run to hiding places.” 

The red jungle fow! is given credit 
for being the “chief parent” of the 
chicken tribe, but there are other 
kinds of jungle fowls and much cross- 
breeding may have gone on in early 


times. 
interest section of 


(For general 
your scrapbook.) ; 

the free leaflet. “Ques- 
Europe,” 


If you want 
en- 


tions and Answers About 
send a 3-cent stamped, return 

velope to me in care of The Atlanta 
Constitution. 


Uncle | 


— Favorite Poultry 


‘Tomorrow 


Breeds. 
(Copyright, 1934, for The Constitution.) 


Uncle Ray, 
Care of The Constitution, 
Atlanta, Ga. 


Dear Uncle Ray: 
myself. 


Name 


1 enclose 2 stamped envelope addressed to 
Please send me the 1934 membership certificate, the leaflet 
telling how to prepare a Corner scrapbook, and the printed cover 
design to paste on the scrapbook which I plan to make. 


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PAGE NINE 


ott. 


| Atlanta 


THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934, _ 


Browning's ‘Scissor Legs’ Will Take 
Clip at Londos’ Mat Locks 


“Thees-a Jeem” Londos will leap in there tonight against 
Jim Browning, the Missouri farmer boy who hires others to 
plow under his corn while he raises cauliflower ear crops. 


The title is at stake—the world’s heavyweight wres- 
tling title—and I rather imagine that when the final 
shoulder is slapped tonight it will be the well-tanned hide 
of the Hero of Hellas which feels it. Which is a long way 
around to saying that Jim Londos should win. 


This would be something of a coincidence with the Madi- 
son Square Garden Jinx. The bout is to be held in the Garden 
bowl on Long Island where a few nights ago Primo Carnera, 
called the Tall Tower of Gorgonzola by the late W. O. Mc- 
Geehan, toppled down in one mighty splash of cottage cheese. 


. No champion has retained his title after ven- 
turing into the bowl with it. Max Schmeling was first. 
Jack Sharkey toppled him on points. I recall yet the 
look of joy which leaped over the Sailor’s face as Joe 
Humphreys reached for his arm bawling—‘“‘The winner 
and the new champion’’—but the roar of the crowd 
drowned out the rest of it. 


Jack Sharkey was next. He ran into what the newspaper 
boys refer to as ‘‘the invisible punch.” It was the Carnera up- 
percut. No one saw it. At least no one has confessed to seeing 
it. But Sharkey was knocked unconscious for 20 minutes. 

And then came Jimmy McLarnin, dropping his welter 
title to Lightweight Barney Ross. : 
Carnera was next, going down 11 times across the blood- 

$pattered canvas and taking the most thorough beating any 
champion has taken since Jack Dempsey ripped big Jess 
Willard to ribbons in the hot, pine bowl at Toledo on July 4, 
1919. The Baer cub was too much for the Italian straw man. 


BOTH GOOD BOYS. 


Both boys may be commended to your consideration. 

Jim Lotdos came to this land of the free and the home 
of the brave as a kid with a high school education in wrestling 
and a plasterer’s assistant job as a trade. 3 


He was a better wrestler than he was a plasterer. His 
name was Christopher Theopheles, or something like 
_that. There may be a_letter or so missing or misplaced. 

A newspaper man (those versatile cusses) named him 

Jim Londos because the name fitted so well in headlines. 

Irwin S. Cobb once wrote a swell story about a man- 

aging editor who helped free a murderess because her 

name fitted so well in any headline. But that is another 
story. 

At any rate he had nothing except his own muscles, brain 
and ability to go on, And he didn’t speak our language. 

He’s worth a half-million or more today. He has 
never been mixed in any scandal. He has kept his own 
path and done a good job. 

Jim Browning was born on a small farm and had to go to 
work at an early age, 12 years, scuffling for a living for him- 
self and his mother. | 

The old sob story? Sure, and true, as most of them 
are. 

He made it. He owns two or three farms, has money in 
the bank and is well-fixed. 

This match will draw better than $100,000 provided 
it doesn’t rain. When all the managers and cutters-in 
have got their share the boys should have about $35,000 
each. 

I’d like to bet Carnera didn’t end up with that much of his 
big purse. 

That, in brief, is an outline of the two. Londos is 
the veteran of the two although not by many years. He 
isn’t too old. — 
| say Londos but won't roll over in a faint if Jim Browning 

nails him with those legs of his. 

At any rate, they are to rassle. This puts the Jinx 
squarely across Jim Browning’s ample shoulders. He is 
recognized by the New York commission—scorned by 
Londos—as champion. 

But that isn’t why I think The Greek will win. He’s 
and he’s a real wrestler. 


smarter 


SO, FOR THAT MATTER, IS BROWNING. 


So, for that matter, is Browning. And a good lad he is. If 
he should snatch Londos into his leg holds the pride of Old 
Hellas would be in a very, very bad way. 

Because not since Joe Stecher was in his prime has 
the game had a fellow who could use his legs as well and 


MOVIE CAMERA 
CHANGES NCAA. 
TRACK RESULTS 


Pictures Cause Wholesale 
Revision of Placings But 
Not in Final Standings. 


By Paul Zimmerman. 


LOS ANGELES, June 24.—(?)— 
Definite proof that the movie cam- 
era is far more accurate than the 
human eye was given today when na- 
tional collegiate officials made a 
wholesale revision of the placing in 
the final races of the N. C._ A. A. 
championships yesterday. 

Changes were made in five events 
from the blanket finish of the 120- 
yard high hurdles on down to the 
quarter-mile, dethroning one cham- 
pion crowned only yesterday and 
shifting the point scores of the teams 
around with abandon. 

Fortunately, the standings of the 
first seven teams were not changed, 
but unfortunately George Fisher, 
Louisiana State high hurdler, was 
shorn of his title with the crown be- 
ing shifted to the head of Sam Klop- 
stock, Stanford. 

NO RECORD. 

The photographic timing device, 
tested and certified before and after 
the meet, probably stole from Glenn 


Hardin, Louisiana State, his chance 
for a world’s 220-yard low hurdle 
record. The camera caught him in 
23.16 seconds while the timers gave 
him a new world’s record at 22.7 sec- 
onds. 

Five changes were made in the 
120-yard high barriers after a study 
of the pictures, which showed that 
Klopstock won by inches with the 
fourth place finisher, Sam Allen, of 
Oklahoma Baptist, less than a foot 
and a half behind. On the basis of 
the screen tests, Amsden Oliver, Mi- 
ami, was awarded second; and Fish- 
er third; Allen held his fourth place 
and Ned Bacon, Denison, retained, 
fifth, but Lee Haring, Kansas State 
Teachers, moved up to sixth from 
seventh and Forrest Wilson. Texas, 
was dropped to seventh. Incidentally, 
the camera time was 14.63 seconds 
as compared to the hand timing of 14.4 
seconds. 

DUPREE ADVANCES. 


The pictures also advanced Dupree 
a notch in the furlon, dash, hoisting 
him from sixth to fifth and shunt- 
ing Ed Hall, Kansas, back to sixth 
from fifth. The last two places also 
were changed in the low barriers with 
W. H. Randow, Texas A. and M., 
getting fifth and Bacon sixth. The 
judges had selected them the other 
is around. 

n the quarter-mile, Jimmy Lu Val- 
le, University of California, at Los 
Angeles, was shoved from fifth, com- 
pletely out of the picture to seventh 
while Ed Ablowich, Southern Cali- 
fornia, a 1932 Olympic games star, 
advanced to fifth. 

Cunningham, who went unplaced in 
the half, was caught by the camera 
in 1 minute, 56 seconds, as compared 
geo — Horunbostel’s victory at 

751.9. 

The revised point standings: Stan- 
ford, 65; Southern California 57 7-20; 
Louisiana State 43; Marquette 20; 
Indiana 20; Fresno State 18: Man- 
hattan 18; New York’U. 17; Miami 
16; Oregon 14: U. C. L. A. 11 3-5; 
California 10 3-5; Michigan Normal 
10 3-5; North Carolina 10; Prince- 
ton 10: Rhode Islanc State 10; San 
Diego State 10; Illinois 9 3-5; Kan- 
sas 9; Auburn 9: Texas A. and M. 
8; Nebraska 6; Maine 6; Butler 6; 
Pennsylvania 6; Washington State 6; 
Colorado Aggies 5; William and Mary 
5; Occidental 4; Oklahoma Baptist 
4; Rice Institute 4; Notre Dame 
3 3-4: Denison 3: West Virginia 2: 
Michigan State 2; Geneva 1 3-4; 
Dartmouth 1 5-4; Kansas State 
Teachers 1; Harvard 1: Oklahoma 
1; San Jose State 1; Texas 0. 


GRANT T0 MEET 
OLD FOE AGAIN 


CHICAGO, June 24.—(/)—Gracyn 
Wheeler, of Santa Monica, Cal., 
reached the climax of an upset tour 
through the women’s division of the 
western tennis tournament today by 
defeating Dr. Esther Bartosh. of Los 
oser for the championship, 6-3, 

The first and second seeded players 


in the men’s section, Bryan “Bitsy” 
Grant, of Atlanta. Ga.. 


and John Me- 
Diarmid, of Fort Worth. Texas, went 
to the finals as expected and will 
meet for the title tomorrow. 

Miss Wheeler, seeded sixth. had ae- 
counted for a pair of Upsets in elimi- 
nating the defending champion, Cath- 
erine Wolf, of Elkhart. Ind., and Hel- 


with as much power as Jim Browning, the Missouri 


Mule. 


As for as sentiment goes | should be rooting for the Brown- 
ing Boy. He was starting in the wrestling business about the 
same year this reporter started in the newspaper business. 

And one day, years ago, he came around, blushing, and 
asked would | assist him in getting a license to get married. 
And so | stood up with the Missouri Mule and saw him mar- 
ried. He still has the same wife. Which is in itself something 
of a record. He spent quite a lot of years in Australia and came 
home a real wrestler. 

He can use those legs. He has a spin hold with 
them which is spectacular and punishing—a rare com- 
bination. He has as much stamina as the man whose 
picture hangs in half the restaurants of the world. 

But somehow, when the going gets fast, | think the Greek 
can out-think him by about one hold. 


Anyhow it should be a match to see. A shooting 


a nn me 


match. 
And it appears the Grecian glass of fashion and mould of 
form has the best rifle. So to speak. ‘ 


OO — 


THE FIRST RASSLE? 


No one knows when the first rassling match was held. 
Some say it was when Adam wrestled with the Devil in the 
Garden of Eden. But then not being there I can’t give a first- 
hand report on that. 


There was wrestling in the Olympic games back in 
the dim mists of Greek antiquity. And before that the 


Egyptians were wrestling and leaving carvings of holds 
on their tombs. We use some of the holds today. 


The Hindus were also wrestling back in the dim ages of 
history. No doubt the ancestors of Jagot Singh, the Hindu | 
who grappies in Atlanta Wednesday night, posed for some of | 
the carvings which are about 2,000 or more years of age. : 


t 


en Fulton, of Winnetka. Til. Today 
she was at her best in defeating Dr. 
Bastosh, seeded third and favored aft- 
er Miss Wolf was eliminated. 

Grant had a comparatively easy 
time in defeating Robert Bryan, of 
Chattanooga, Tenn.. 6-3. 8-6, 7-5. He 
whipped through the first set, and | 
was well into the second before he. 
eased up. Bryan rallied, but the | 
little Atlantan put on pressure just 
often enough to run out the match. 
He apparently was saring something 
for the finals tomorrow. 

McDiarmid dropped the first set 
to Marcel Rainville, Canadian Davis 
cup veteran, but altered his game 
and won the match, 2-6, 6-3. 6-0. then 
he adopted a chopping game in the 
second set. playing to  Rainville’s 
backhand. The Canadian became un- 
steady and eventually lost the match 
on errors. 

Paired:with Karl Kamrath. of Aus- 
tin, Texas, Grant won a share of the 


doubles honors, defeating Bryan and 
MeDiarmid in a long five-setter, 7-9, 
6-8, 14-12, 62, 6-1. | 
In the women’s doubles Dr. Bartosh 
and Marianne Hunt, of Los Angeles, 
won the title by an easy 6-3, 6-4 vic- 
tory over Miss Fulton and Miss Wolf. 


Grant To Pass Up 


Tri-State Meet. 

CINCINNATI June 23.—()—Bry- 
an ‘Bitsy’ Grant sent word today that 
he will be unable to defend his title, 
and the men’s singles of the time-hon- 
ored tri-state tennis tournament at 
once became a grand free-for-all. 

For Grant, an upset king of the 
tennis circuit, had been looked upon as 
likely to win the celebrated tri-state 
title once more, especially since youug 
Frankie Parker, of Milwaukee. had 
decided not to come here either. 
Grant's decision, sent from Chicago, 
and held to be on his physician’s or- 


ders, left the incoming stars with no 
one particular man to beat, 


SOUTHERN LEAGUE. 


¥ THE STANDINGS. 
CLUBS— iw. iL. Pct.|CLUBS— w. L. Pet. 
Nashville 44 21 .677 Knoxville 31 35 .470 
N. Orleans 37 27 .578|Birmingham 31 38 .449 
ATLANTA 34 29 .540/Chattanooga 30 37 .448 
Memphis 33 82 .508/ Little Rock 24 45 .348 


YESTERAY’S RESULTS. 
ATLANTA 2-4; Memphis 5-3. 
Chattanooga 3-1; Birmingham 4-4. 
Knoxville 4-2; New Orleans 5-3. 
Nashville 3-3; Little Rock 5-1. 


TODAY’S GAMES. 
ATLANTA at Little Rock. 
Chattanooga at New Orleans. 
Knoxville at Birmingham. 
(Only games scheduled.) 


AMERICAN LEAGUE. 


THE STANDINGS. 


CLUBS— W.L. Pet.,\CLUBS— W. L. Pct. 
Detroit 88 24 .613/ Wash. 3431 .523 
N. York 3624 .600/St. Louis 27382 .458 
Cleveland 3127 .534/Phila. 26 36 .400 
Boston 33 29 .5382|\Chicago 2141 .339 
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. 
Cleveland 6; Boston 2. 
Detroit 8; Philadelphia 4. 
Chicago 0; New York 5. 
St. Louis 0: Washington 7, 


TODAY'S GAMES. 
St. Louis at Washington. 
Detroit at Philadelphia. 
Cleveland at Boston. 
Chicago at New York. 


NATIONAL LEAGUE, 
THE STANDINGS. 
CLUBS— W.L. Pct.;|CLUBS~— W. L. Pct. 
N. York 4022 .645/Boston 3220 .525 
St. Louis 3624 .600/ Brooklyn 2637 .413 
Chicago 88 26 .594/Phila. 2238 .567 
P’tsburgh 3127 .534\Cincinnati 1941 .317 


YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. 
Boston 2-7; Cincinnati 0-10. 
Brooklyn 1-0; Chicago 5-8. 
Philadelphia 5; Pittsburgh 11. 
New York 9; St. Louis 7, 


TODAY’S GAMES. 
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. 

New York at St. Louis. 
(Only games scheduled.) 


ASSOCIATION. 


THE STANDINGS. 
CLUBS—_ w. |. Pct.|CLUBS~— 
Minneapolis 40 27 .597|St. Paul 31 32 .492 
Indianapolis 33 30 .524| Louisville 32 34 .485 
Milwaukee 34 32 .515|Kansas City 80 35 .462 
Columbus 34 32 .515/Toledo 28 40 .412 


w. L. Pet. 


YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. 
Milwaukee 4-3: Columbus 12-1, 
Kansas City 6-10; Toledo 3-9. 
St. Paul 5-3; Indianapolis 1-2. 
Minneapolis 5-0; Louisville 7-3. 


TODAY'S GAMES. 
Milwaukee at Columbus. 
Kansas City at Toledo. 
St. Paul at Indianapolis. 
Minneapolis at Louisville. 


INTERNATIONAL. 


THE STANDINGS, 
W. L. Pet.|CLUBS— 


CLUBS— 


Newark 4722 .681|Albany 33 33 .500 
Rochester 4228 .600/ Buffalo 28 39 .418 
Toronto 40 28 .528\Syracuse 2738 .4 
Montreal 3533 .515/Baltimore 1647 .254 
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. 


Syracuse 2-0: Newark 4-11. | 
Baltimore 7-3; Albamy 11-12. 
Buffalo 9-7: Rochester 5-9. 
Toronto 0; Montreal 2 (night game). 
TODAY'S GAMES. 
Buffalo at Rochester. 
Toronto at Montreal. 
Baltimore at Albany. 
Syracuse at Newark. 


SOWEGA 


THE STANDINGS. 
W. L, Pct.{CLUBS 


CLUBS 


Ashburn 24 11 .686/Cordele 17 18 .486 
Sylvester 22 13 .629|\Vienna 14 21 .460 
Montezuma 22 13 .620/Americus 12 2 .343 
McRae 19 16 543 Fitzgerald 10 23 .303 


TODAY’S GAMES. 
Americus at Vitagerald. 
Ashburn at Montezuma. 
H.-McRae at Cordele. 
Vienna at Sylvester. 


Yates Is Rated 
With Veterans 
As Meet Opens 


By James L. Renick. 


COUNTRY CLUB, CLEVELAND, 
O., June 24.—(/)—Over the undulat- 
ing. forest-fringed course of the coun- 
try club, 123 collegiate golfers will 
start tomorrow morning the week- 
long battle that constitutes the thirty- 
sixth annual tournament of the In- 
tercollegiate Golf Association of 
America, 

All day today the course was scat- 
tered with collegians. Some were 
busy taking their game apart to see 
why it didn’t click while others were 
satisfied and hoped it would remain 
as it was for a week. 

In the latter category were Walter 
Emery, 21-year-old junior from the 
University of Oklahoma. the defending 
champion; and Charles “Chuck” 
Koosis, the Hungarian lad from the 
University of Michigan, holder of 
the western conference title and con- 
sidered a favorite to win the inter- 
collegiate crown, 

Few cards were turned in today and 
the ones that were reported meant lit- 
tle as the lads were intent on perfect- 
ing their games. The majority of 
those who played drove two balls on 
each tee, played the best, tried putts 
over and even conceded some doubtful 
ones, 

Besides Emery there are several 
other “veterans” of last year’s cam- 
paign at Buffalo. Ineluded among 
these are such players as Charley 
Yates, of Georgia Tech; Johnny 
Banks, of Notre Dame, who tied for 
the medal honors last year; Law 
Weatherwax and Oliver Transue, 
Yale; John Payne and Ed White, of 
Texas, Vice Fehlig, of Notre Dame, 
and several others. 

One of the 18-hole qualifying 
rounds will be played tomorrow and 
the other Tuesday after which match 
play will start. 


Marietta Golfers 
Defeat Sweetwater 


The Marietta Golf Club ~~ defeated 
Sweetwater 14 to 4 in a _ regularly 
scheduled league match over the 
Sweetwater course Sunday afternoon. 
The matches were much closer than 
the score indicates. 

A large number of golfers played 
the Sweetwater course during the day 
and found it in great condition. Since 
the addition of nine other holes it is 
one of the most popular courses in 
or near the city. 

The results: Sweetwater first—R. 
Holbrook and J. Causey won 2 and 
lost 1 point to John Pate and Max 
Pittard; Dr. F. A. Clark and UH. 
Dunn lost 3 points to M. McNeal and 
Bob Northeutt: B. Perkerson and A. 
Holbrook won 1 and lost 2 points to 
A. Williams and George Thomas: M., 
Gorden and Joe Kennedy lost 
points to H. Laudermilk and J. Walk- 
er: R. Hardage and Howard Land 
won 1 and lost 2 points to Charles 


Defore and Bill Sibley: B. Beldon! 
and Y. Causey lost three points to G.| 


Hanson and Lanch. 


31. 


BRITISH OPEN 
COLE TOURNEY 
BEGINS TODAY 


Sarazen, Kirkwood Card 
69’s in Practice To Be- , 
come Favorites. 


“By Gayle Talbot. 


SANDWICH, Kpg., June 24.—(?) 
That inseparable American pair, 
Gene Sarazen and Joe Kirkwood, 
treated themselves to a brace of 60s 
this hot day over the Royal St. 
George's course in the final tuneup 
for the British open golf champion- 
ship, starting tomorrow. 

Yeteraationalty famous for the 
tricks he can make a golf ball do, 
Kirkwood turned in his sizzling 
round, only one over the course rec- 
ord, in the morning while Sarazen 
chose the afternoon to take the tough 
layout apart. 

Sarazen was hitting every shot 
beautifully for the benefit of a gal- 
lery of several hundred. Kirkwood, 
peneany with the defending champion, 

enny Shute, of Philadelphia, and the 
British amateur, Francis Francis, 
needed only a pair of easy fours on 
the last two holes for a record-smash- 
ing 67, but dubbed his approach shots 
to both greens. 

TURNS IN 33. 

Sarazen turned in a 33 for the 
8,225-yard front nine and a 36 for 
the 3,55l-yard trip home. Kirkwood’s 
nine-hole scores were 31 and 38. 

Later in the day Kirkwood toured 
the course again, this time posting an 
approximate 74. Shute still was away 
off form and his chances of retaining 
the title he won in a play-off with 
Craig Wood last year were not con- 
sidered bright by most experts. 

The fourth member of the American 
“Big Four,” MacDonald Smith, of 
Nashville, apparently well satisfied 
with his practice form, took things 
easy on a hotel verandah as did most 
of the leading British contenders. 

Although Sarazen, the pre-tourney 
favorite, Shute, Kirkwood and Smith 
form the major part of the American 
threat for the title players from the 
United States have won for 10 con- 
secutive years, there are three others 
in the record entry list of 313— 
Douglas Grant, former Californian, 
and the Sweeny brothers, Charles and 


Robert. 
HUGE FIELD. 

Because of the huge field, the 36- 
hole qualifying round will be played 
on two courses. Half the field will 
play the first 18 holes of the qualify- 
ing round over the Royal St. George’s 
course tomorrow and the second 18 
over the Royal Cinque Ports layout 


15} at Deal Tuesday. The other half will 


reverse that procedure. 

The low 100 and ties in the quali- 
fying round will go into the first 18- 
hole round of the championship prop- 
er Wednesday. The second 18 will be 


played Thursday after which the field 500 


will be reduced again, to the low 60 
and ties. The final 36 holes will be 
played Friday. All four rounds of 
the championship will be played over 
the Royal St. George’s course. 

Shute, Mehlhorn, Kirkwood, both 
Sweenys and Grant will play the 
Royal St. George’s links tomorrow and 
Royal Cinque Ports Tuesday. Sarazen, 
MacDonald Smith and Lacy will re- 
verse that program. — 


WEST END NET 
TOURNEY BEGINS 


The first round of the West End 
tennis tourney opens today at 9 a. m. 
on the West End courts. The field 
will be the strongest since it was in- 
augurated 10 years ago. 

With ghe entries of Preston Cham- 
bers, Frank Mayhew, former Charlotte 
(N. C.) city champion; Lem Brace- 
well and Malcolm Manley, the field 
will be very strong. 

For information in regards to the 
pairings call Charlie Campbell, Ray- 
mond 7080, or Glenn McConnell, Ray- 
mond 3728. 

THE PAIRINGS. 
9 A. Mz 
Lem Braswell vs. Clark Baker. 


Park Smith vs. Malcolm Manley. 
Red Griffith bis Twink Johnson. 
OA 


James Harden vs. Jack “Teagle. 

Charles Campbell ys. Sam Whatley. 

Glenn mexen er — Rawls. 
A . 


Glenn Dudley vs. John Brown, 
Hurt Atkinson vs. Bob Leach. 
Maurice Bennienue vs. Max Lindsey, 


Preston Chambers Ie ppiterce Zuber. 


Eddie Manderson vs. Frank Mayhew. 

Hugh Mason vs. George Dennis. 

Allen Campbell vs. Bobby Hughes. 
6P?. M 


Gordon White vs. James McHenry. 
Joe Williamson, bye. 
Jimmie Campbell, bye. 


Jim Browning, 
Jim Londos 


ToClash 


NEW YORK, June 24,—(UP)— 
On the assumption that the leg is 
mightier than the arm, Jim Browning, 
Missouri pig fancier, has been install- 
ed 7-to-5 favorite to become undis- 
puted heavyweight wrestling cham- 


of pPion of the world tomorrow night at 


the expense of Jim Londos, Greek 
Adonis. 

The entanglement of these two 
brawny rival title claimants at Madi- 
son Square Garden's bowl promises to 
be a classie of modernized mayhem. 
The crunching of bones, thudding of 
bodie&’, tortured grunts, groans and 
hurpings may be heard clear over in 
New Jérsey. 

Because of their formidable reputa- 
tions and histrionic accomplishmente, 
Promoter Jack Curley expects more 
than 30.000 fans to witness the hurly- 
burly and contribute a gate of ap- 
proximately $100,000. 


Three Foursomes 
Tie at East Lake 


First and second prize in the regu- 
lar Sunday afternoon dog-fight tour- 
nament for members of the East Lake 
club were well divided yesterday when 
three foursomes tied for, both prea. 

In the first trio were H. T. Dobbs, 
H. S. Roberts, Tom McCurry an B. 
E Shields; O. W. Miller. W. H. 
Vaughan, W.Callaway and J. J. Lon- 
ergan, and J. A. Whatley, 8. E. Gill, 
W. F. Wilson and J. M. Marshall. The 
winning score was 139. 

Sharing second place at 145 .each 
were George Sargent, M. F. Hail, Ww. 
H. Calhoun and F. W. Whitmore; J. 
J. MeGeory, L. A. Scott, J. Robertson 
and E. E. Lyon, and Dr. B. B. Gay, E. 
~ Trice, C. Kay and Dr. M. F, Fow- 


Tr te 


—— 


Jack Gray Is Crowned 
City Skeet Champion 


I. B. Duke Wins Class 


Minehan Wins C Honors. 


B Title While Ralph 


By Jack Troy. 
Old Jack (1 don’t mind the gray skies) Gray needed a 25 straight 
to tie Jack Tway, the other half of the powderdust twins combination, 
yesterday afternoon in the battle for the city skeet championship at the | 


West End Gun Club. 


champion crowned. 


There has been just one other city championship skeet shoot held in 
the Gate City. That was in 1930 and Hubert Fields, referee of yester- 


day’s 100-bird event, won it. 


It was a grand shoot. The West‘ 


End Gun Club deserves a lot of credit. 
Everything was perfect. There were 
no delays and few questionable tar- 
gets. The new traps functioned splen- 
didly on both days. 

P. M. Gilbert, who was third in 
the city championship race, won the 
shoot-off to determine the handicap 
champion of the inaugural program. 
There was a five-way tie and Gilbert 
won with a great 49x50. 

PAIR OF JACKS. 

Jack Gray and Jack Tway, a pair 
of Jacks any gun club would like to 
hold, broke 95x100 to force a shoot- 
off. Buddy Jones was high pro* with 
a similar score. So there was a three- 


way shoot-off. And Gray, as men- 
tioned, won. 
Jones was high gun over all fur the 
two-day program, breaking 144 of the 
150 targets. The ever-late Mister 
a was never late on those fast- 
yi targets. , 
LB. Duke, field captain of the 
West End Gun Club, won the cham- 
ionship in Class B yesterday. Duke 
roke a classy 90x100. He finished 
with a straight to win from C. R. 
Pyron, who broke 89. It was the 
stretch finish of a champion. L. E. 
Grant, the gon old sportsman, was 
third with 865. 
There was a tie for the champion- 
ship in Class C. Ralph (My Pal) 
Minehan and the writer tied with 31 
shoot-off, 


each. 
Roper was 


Minehan won the 
breaking 22x25. S. W. 
third with 78. 

Farlier in the day the writer had 
won a shoot-off held over from a 
previous class shoot from the persist- 
ent Mister Minehan. 

CAPITOL WINS. 


The Capitol Gun Club team won 
the team shoot, with a total of 483 
of the 500 targets. The team was 
composed of Jack Tway, E. B. Free- 
man, J. C. oe Ralph Minehan 
and Larry Grant. } 

The West End Gun Club’s No. 1 
team was runner-up. The ‘members 
were L. E. Draper, P. M. Gilbert, C. 
R. Pyron, Dad Hawkins and _ the 
writer. This team’s score was 476x 


The Airport team finished third. 
Its members were Jack Gray, George 
Cushing, Al Frese Sr., Ashby Taylor 
and Clyde King. 
Other prize winners in the inaugu- 


ral handicap won by P. M. Gilbert 
were Benson Freeman Jr., 44; H. O 
Davis Sr., 43; Paul Klassett, 40. 


There was quite a breeze on the 
hilltop traps yesterday. And_ while 
this situation was a relief to the 
crowd, it was no aid to the shooters 
who battled ducking targets through 
most of the day. This explains the 
absence of better scores. 

PRAISE FOR ALL. 

The West End Club, whose officers 
are S. W. Roper, president; K. 
Draper, vice president; C. L. Davis, 
secretary, and I. B. Duke, field cap- 
tain, offers sincere thanks to Jack 
Gray, of the Airport club, for his aid 
in seating the crowd. Gray sent out a 
number of new benches for the oc- 
casion. 

The club also expressed gratitude to 
the officials who bandled the register 
on the championship—Hubert Fields, 
Paul Klassett and Buddy Jones. 

Incidentally, Tom Cassels, one of 
Buddy Jones’ professional side-kicks, 
also shot. He didn’t want to hurt 
Buddy's feelings, so he missed one 
here and there. 

If anyone were giving away bou- 
quets for conscientious endeavor and 
hard work, Clint Davis, secretary of 
the West End club, would be eligible 
for several. It was through his ef- 
forts that the shoot was the great suc- 
cess that it was. Details interferred 
with his shooting, but he entered all 
the races and shot well, in spite of it. 

splendid assortment of silver 
trophies were given the winners and 
runner-ups in the city championship. 
Bronze medals were distributed to the 
team winner and sport lights to the 
members of the runner-up team. 

P. M. Gilbert was the prize win- 
ner over all with two silver trophies 
and a sport light. 

The presentation speeches of Ben- 
son Freeman Jr. will live in history. 
They were gems of sparkling wit. 
And Freeman, not to be outdone in 
the trophy presentations, awarded 
himself a couple for his individual 
re team work in the city champion- 
ship. 


Fort Poloists 
Beat Guards, 
9tol 


Scoring in every period. the Fort 
McPherson lo team defeated the 
Governor’s Horse Guard, 9 to 1, Sun- 
day afternoon, before a large crowd 
at Fort McPherson. 

Howell and Wing, with three goals 
each, led the scoring for the winners. 
Graham scored the only goal for the 


Referee, Love. 


Beckett, Sargent 
Enter Pro Tourney 


Two Atlanta golf professionals, 
Howard Beckett, of the Capital City 
Club, and George Sargent, of the East 
Lake Club, will participate. in the 
annual Southeastern Professional! Gol 
Association tournament this week at 
Birmingham. 

Beckett left the city Sunday night 
and will put in a practice round to- 
day, while Sargent will leave this 
afternoon. Gene Dahlbender will ac- 
company Sargent thie afternoon. 

The tournament will open Tues- 
day with the ennual pro-amateur 
tournament as a preliminary. with 
the medal rounds for the pros sched- 
\nled to open on Wednesday morning. 


And so he went out and shot it. Just like that. And when it came 
time for the shoot-off to determine the city champion, Gray broke an- 
other straight. Tway broke 24. And so was Atlanta’s second city skeet 


NASHV. ab.h.po.a./LIT. ROCK ab.h.po.a. 
Ceinello,2b 5 0 38 2/Buchanan,2b 5 0 1 4 
Rehborg,rf 4 1 1 O|Nnkamp,cf 3 1 4 0 
Whtraubd,lf 3 1 3 O|Grossman,if 4 2 0 0 
Leiber,cf 4 0 2 O/Trapp,3b 4 i @@ 
Prather,lb 4 0 6 l1jBrowne,lb 4111 1 
Rodda,ss 3 0 0 2Etten,rf 4420 
| Dueker,3b 3 1 1 2)Malinsky,ss 4 0 2 4 
O’Malley,c 38 1 7 O|Whitney,c 40 5 0 
Stafford,p 2 1 1 OjStruss,p 4123 
xMartin 1000 

Totals 32 524 7! Totals 36 10 27 14 

xBatted for Stafford in 9th. 
PORGMUENG  VAchoas tdweespedes 000 61 000—3 
SeetGOe BO kccbecbacoie es caee 20x—5 


‘lett to Lowell; 


Horse Guard in the sixth chukker. Berger, Boss, Hughes. Holman, Johnson; 
THE SUM ; errors, Florne 2, 0’Malley, Pintarell, Hughes, 

HORSE GUARD (1) Pos. FT. MAC (9)/| Johnson: runs batted ,n, Pintarell, Hulvey, 
Graham (1) «...se6. | ERC AE: (3) Wing] French, George, Boss, Hughes. West, John- 
CiristiaW ....cecccess Ba cc untes (3) Howell! son: two-base hits, Oulliber, Boss, French; 
Williamson ....eceees Giccckacdaea (1) Clark} stolen base, Hughes: sacrifices, O'Malley, 
MORAN ccc cscs vsscice Bi ctvcovess (2) Baker | Brandes; double plays, Pntarelf to Horne to 
Smith, alternate. O'Malley, Boss to Johnson to George: left on 
Score by chukkers: bases, Knoxville 9, New Orleans 11; base 
Horse Guard ..-eeeeeens 0 9 © O ® 1—1! on balls, off Hulvey 1. off Moon 1; struck 
Ft. MePherson ...+...+- 1 22 4 0 O—9/ out, by Hulvey 1. by Johnson 1: hits, off 


VOLS DIVIDE 
WITH TRAVELERS 


LITTLE ROCK, June 24.—After 
dropping the first game, 5 to 3, the, 
league-leading Nashville Vols came 
back to take a 38-to-1 decision in the 
second contest to break even with Lit- 
tle Rock in a twin bill here today. 
The Vols won the series, three games 


to one. 

Nashville failed to show its usual 
power at bat in the first game as 
Struss limited the violent Vols to five 
hits while his teammates collected 10 
off Stafford. 

In the second game, Nashville gave 
Speece a three-r lead during the 
first two innings, and the Vol hurler 
responded by holding the Travelers at 
bay except in the third, when Little 
Rock shoved its lone tally across the 
plate, 

(FIRST GAME. 


Runs, Rickbourg, Weintraub, Rodda, Non- 
nenkamp, Grossman 2, ae 2: errors, Rod- 
da, Dueker, O'Malley, Stafford, Buchanan, 
Whitney: runs batted in, Etten 3, Stafford, 
Rodda, Browne; two-base hits, Struss, Non- 
nenkamp, Weintraub; stolen base, Rich- 
bourg; double plays, Rodda to Cuccinello 
to Prather, Buchanan to Malinsky to 
Browne; left on bases, Nashville 8, Little 
Rock 8: basés on balls, off Stafford 1, Struss 
6; struck out, by Stafford 6, Struss 5. 
Umpires, Johnson and Ainsmith. Time of 
game, 1:52. 

(SECOND GAMB.) 


NASH. ab.h.po.a./LITTLE R. ab.h.po.a. 
Cuccinlo.2b 4 1 0 2|Buehanan,2b 41 4 1 
Richburg,rf 2 1 2 OjNonnenkp,cf 2 0 3 0 
Weintrb.lf 3 1 1 O|Grossman,lf 3 1 2 0 
Leiber,cf 3 1 2 O|Trapp,3b 82032 
Prather,lb 3 0 5 O/Browne,.p 315 0 
Rodda,ss 3183 4 Etten,rf 81323 40 
Dueker,3b 23 0 O O/Malinsky,ss 3 0 8 2 
Wise,c 3 1 4 O| Rice,c 304180 
Speece,p 3 1 1 1jNugent,p 2001 
O’Malley,c 0 O 2 OjzgMonroe 1000 
x Martin 06 0 0 

Totals 26 721 | Totals 27 621 6 

xRan for Wise in seventh. 

zBatted for Nugent in seventh, 
OU: as xv a enndeese beans 20 000 6—3 


Little Rock . oO O—1 

Runs, Richbourg, Rodda, Speece, Nonnen- 
kamp; ruus batted in, Leiber, Speece, Rich- 
bourg, Browne; two-base hit, Browne; three- 
base hits, Weintraub, Trapp; stolen base, 
Richbourg; sacrifice, Dueker; double play, 
Buchanan to Malinsky to Browne; left on 
bases, Nashville 4, Little Rock 6 base on 
balls, off Speece 1, Nugent 1; struck out, 
by Speece 6, Nugent 1. Umpires, Ainsmith 
and Johrson. Time of game, 1:24. 


BARONS 4-4; LOOKOUTS 3-1. 
(FIRST GAME.) 


CHATTA. ab.h.po.a.|BIR’HAM. ab.h.po.a. 
Reeves,3b 5 2 2 3) Willett,ss S. ¢ 2:4 
Mihalic,2b 4 0 3 6 Strobm,3b §3i38& 
Schino,cf 4 2 1 U!Lowell,1lb 43114 0 
Gill rf 41 2 O}| Weis,if ee S 
Shirley,ib 4 124 2: Epps,cf &’32 0 
Marion,If 38 0 8 O|Barbee,rf 4140 
Maxcy,ss 40 1 SjNeisler.c ee 2 
Holbrook,c 4 0 1 O/Kane,2b 402 4 
Cohen,p 2 0 1 1)Murry.p 310903 
Barfoot,p ‘1 0 0 1/xRushing 22368 

Totals 35 6x2818| Totals 37 11 30:17 


xOne out when winning run asacored. 
200 ( 


CHALtTABOOMR .ccccccvcccra OO OO 1—3 
Birmingham... .'.......: 00 000 20 24 
Runs, Reeves 2, Schino, Strohm, Weis, 


Epps, Rushing; errora, Willett 2; runs bat- 
ted in, Barbee 2, Schino, Gill, Shirley, Wil- 
lett, Epps; two-base hits, Reeves, Schino, 
Epps; three-base hits, Rushing, Strohm; 
left on bases, Chattanooga 7, Birmingham 
9; struck out, by Murray 3; base on balls, 
off Barfoot 2, off Murray 3, 6 hits and 2 
runs off Cohen in 6 innings; losing pitcher, 
Barfoot. Umpires, Campbell and Grigg. 
Time of game, 2:05. 


(SECOND GAME) 
CHATTA. ab.h.po.a.|BIRM. ab.h.po.a. 
Reeves,3b 4 3 O i)Willett,ss 3 6.3 4 
Mihalic,.2b 4 0 1 2/Strohm,3b 82001 
Schino,cf 21 3 OjLowell.1b 3 0.4 Ge. 
Gill rf 3 0 0 O| Weis,if 2150 
Shirley,.1b 3 0 7 l1\Bpps,cf 203230 
Marion, If eh ee 0|Barbee,rf 33.3 6 
Maxcy,ss 3 2 3 1,Redmond,c 1 0 2 0 
Chandler.c 2 0 © O Kanfte,2b . iis ee 
xHolbrook 1 0 O O/Griffin,p 310903 
Moss,p 32 = 
xxLinke 100900 
—— —— | 

Totals 28 718 7| Totals 20 421 8 

xBatted for Chandler in seventh. 

xxBatted for Moss in seventh. 
CUIOO Giinscckoéksusesds 010 600 Ol 
SERRRIIGOED 4c deck cen dawwis ec 0 OO x—4 

Runs, Marion, Wels, Barbee, Redmond, 
Kane: error, Maxcy; runs batted in, Max- 
cy, Kane, Griffin; two-base hit, Marion; 


sacrifice hits, Epps, Redmond; left on base, 
Chattanooga 7, Birmingham 6; double plays, 
Reeves to Maxcy to Shirley. Kane to Wil- 
base on balls, off Moss 4, 
off Griffin 1; struck out, by Griffin 2; 
hit by pitcher, Redmond (by Moss). Um- 
pres. Grigg and Campbell. Time of game, 
1: 


PELS 5-3; SMOKIES 4-2. 


(FIRST GAME.) 

KNOXYV. ab.h.po.a.|NEW 0. ab.h.po.a. 
Brandes.3b 4 1 O 2/Oulliber.cf 5 3 2 O 
French,rf 5 3 4 0) Berger,2b 4138 
Al'ngtn,cf 5 2 3 O|Boss,1b 5 110 1 
West,c 5 2 2 O|Rose,if § @6 3 
Horne.ss 42 3 4 Hughes,ss 4383 6 
Pint’r’'l.2b 41 2 SiHolman,3b 30411 
O’Malley,ib 3 0 9 OjGleeson,rf 3000 
Whire, lf 4 2 1 O|George,c ae F 
Hulvey,p 8 0 0 2\Johnson,p 4213 
Moon.p 1000 

Totals 38 13 2411! Totals 37 11 27 15 
I + 5 cebdde chavweced 001—4 
ee Ge bk cakes cases 000 121 10x—5 


Runs, Brandes, Horne, Pintarell, Whire, 


(SECOND GAME.) 

KNOXYV. a.h.pd.a./NE 0. ab.h.po.a. 
Brandes.3b 3 2 2 Ilj\Oulliber.cf 301 0 
French,rf 2 01 Oj|Berger, 3105 
Al'agtn.ct 2 0 3 O|Boss.1b 30913 1 
Head.c 301 Rose, If 329090 
Hurne,ss 3 1 8 SiHughes,ss ae « 
West. if 3 0 2 O|Holman.3db 2001 
O’Malley.ib 2 0 5 OjiGleeson,rf 3 15 0 
Pint’r’'l.2> 211 OAutrye 2111 
Scott. 2 0 O 1\Milnar.p 2002 
xClark 100 ¥ 
Totals 34 418 5 Totals 24 62114 

xBatted for O'Malley in 7th. 
Knoxville ee Oe eee eeeeeee ee 200 000 0—2 
New Orleans ........««.«- ... 00 OOO x—3 

Runs, Brandes, Allington, Rose, Hughes, 
Holman: errors, Horne, Autry: runs batted 
in. Horne, Gleeson 2, Oulliber; two-base 
hits. Pintarell. Hughes; stolen bases, 
French: sacrifice, French: double plays, 
Brandes to '’Malley, Scott to Horne to 
O'Malley: left on bases. Knoxville 2. New 
Orleans 4: base on balls, off Milnar 1. off 


Scott 1: struck out, by Scott 1, by Milnar 
1. Umpires. Quinn and Bick Campbell. Time 


Divides Double-Header With Memphis, 2-5,. 4-3 


NELSON WINS 
CLOSING GAME 
FOR CRACKERS 


Schmidt and Pruitt Work 
Initial Contest of 
Twin Bill. 


By David Bloom. 


MEMPHIS, Tenn., June 24.—Old 
John Strategy, who can be very, very 
good, or very, very bad, was quite 
bad for Atlanta this afternoon, do- 
nating the first game of a double- 
header to the Memphis club this aft- 
ernoon, 5 to 2. The Chicks, not to 
be outdone, donated the second one 
to the Crackers, 4 to 3. , 

Thus the Crackers got away from 
town with one victory out of the 
four-game series and they were mighty 
lucky to get that one. On the other 
hand, Billy Bayne, the Chick left- 
hander, continued his run of tough 
luck by being the victim of his catch- 
er’s mistake. 

Clay Touchstone did the twirling 
in the first game and turned in a 
neat five-hit job to outpoint Bill 
Schmidt and Dave Pruett in some- 
thing of a pitcher’s duel, that is, it 
was a duel until Mr. Abbott kindly 
jerked Schmidt and Pruett started 
walking runs across, 

NELSON WINS. 

Lyon Nelson was the victor in the 
second, although he yielded seven hits, 
the same number as Bayne, and four 
of them were bunched in one big Chick 
inning that all but put the game on 
ice. That was in the fifth round 
and the Chicks were leading, 3-to-1, 
when Cuoto threw one wild and miss- 
ed one on easy outs and the Crackers 
knotted the count and eventually won 
in the seventh. It was just too bad. 

The Crackers had a 2-to-O lead go- 
ing into the fifth of the first. They 
scored in the first with two out on 
a double by Harry Taylor and a sin- 
gle by Prince Oana. They counted 
in the fourth on a walk to Chatham 
and Taft Wright’s double. And Mr. 
Schmidt was patching very well, in- 
deed. 

In the fifth Joe Hutcheson doubled 
and Joe Prerost singled to get one 
hack and in the seventh the Tribe 
knotted the count on Andy Reese’s 
single, a wild pitch and Hutcheson’s 
single. 

Then Abbott tried strategy and it 
curdled. Had it worked he would 
have been a hero. It didn’t. Peck 
Hamel! singled to open the seventh. 
George Knothe sacrificed. Abbott de- 
cided to give Cal Chapman an in- 
tentional pass and then lifted Schmidt 
in favor of Pruett. Pruett was even 
more generous than Abbott. He walk- 
ed Reese and Hutcheson in succes- 
sion and Hamel scored. en Pre- 
rost popped out to short right and 
Chapman came home after the catch, 
Reese moving to third. Then Hutch 
and Reese worked a double _ steal. 
Reese scoring when Pruett deflected 
Palmisano’s throw. That was all, 
but three runs had come in and the 
Crackers got but one hit off Touch- 
stone in the next three innings. It 
was mighty nice of the Crackers. 

NICE CHICKS. 

It was mighty nice of the Chicks, 
too, in the next game. They went 
into the sixth with a 3-to-1 lead and 
it looked good the way Bayne was 
pitching. With one out. H. Tavlor 
and Oana singled in succession, Tay- 
lor moving to third. McKee hit a 
bouncer to Reese and Reese threw to 
the plate. H. Taylor turned back to 
third and Cuoto and Cal Chapman 
caught him in a chase. In the run- 
up, Cuoto missed Chappie’s toss. then 
threw badly to Chappie and Taylor 
scrambled hack safely. 

The bases were full. Sheerin. bat- 
ting for Vance, topped a hall in front 
of the plate. Bavne fielded the hall 
cleanly. tossed to Cuoto and the Cuban 
dropped the hall with Taylor out by 
two feet. Then Chatham flied out 
to Hamel and Oana scored. 

The winning run came in the sev: 
enth on James’ triple and E. Tay- 
lor’s liner to center. 


The Box Scores 
(FIRST GAME.) 
ATLANTA— ab. rr. 
James, 2b 
E. Taylor, 3b 


H. Taylor, 1b 
Oana, ef 


“sre @eeeve 
“er 07 


Palmisano, c .. 
Chatham, ss 

Wright, if ....-. 
Bohmidt, p ...+-++ os 


OUe heen eewer 
ScorcooHos 

SConeocoHneao™ 
Sow Mere ais ]8s 
OK or eoorn +P 
eceoceceoooo® 


5 
3 


SCerrwwnwoosw& 


os 


Prerost, lf ..... ecce 
Kingdon. ss ... 
Couto, c eeeeee 
Touchstone, p .++++s 


Totals 
Atlanta 
WMemgMls 2. cc ccsdiuscers &s 

Runs batted in, Oana, Wright, 
2. Hutcheson 2; two-base hits, H. 
Wright 2, Hutcheson: stolen base, Knothe; 
sacrifice, Knothe to Kingdon to Reese; left 
on bases, Memphis 7, Atiatna 6; bases on 
balls, off Touchstone 3; Schmidt 2; Pruett 3; 
4. Schmidt 1, 


6th. 


- 
=~] 
7 
~ 


SOUS © fc cecsvahea 

xBatted for Vance in 
MEMPHIS— a 
es OE éakake 
Knothe. ss 
Chapman, 
Reese, 1b 
Hutcheson, 
If 


Prerost, 
Kingdon, 
uto, c 
Bayne, 
xx Wise 


rv eee eevee 


oonwre cooceo”™ 

o 
corner Orwnwooc- 
eowrwocrreoo” 
conwcoocecoooo” 


WOON sk scetan dear 

xxBatted for Bayne in 7t 
Atlanta ,. 
Memphis 000 
Runs batted in, Cuto 2; James, Chatham, 

Taylor, Bayne; two-base hits, James, 
Prerost; three-base hit, James; sacrifices, 
> Taylor, Hamel; left on base, Memphis 4, 
I 


Se eer tear eee eneeeeere 


feet ereeeeeeeeneen eee 


Atlanta 5; bases on balls, off Nelson 4, 
Bayne 2. Umpires. McLarry and Williams. 
Time of game, 1:30, 


PEARSON WINS. 


BROOKLINE, Mass., June 24.— 
(?)}—Kathryn Pearson, of Rice Insti- 
tute, Texas, today won the girls’ in- 
vitation inter-collegiate tennis tourna- 
ment championship by defeating Beth 
Lancaster, of Smith College, 6-2, 7-5, 
on the grass courts at the Longwood 
Tennis Club here. 

Miss Pearson teamed with Mary 
Haskell. of Bryn Mawr, in_ the 
doubles finals to down Emily Lincoln, 


of game, 1: 


[of Smith, and Miss Lancaster, 6-1, 
6 


Oh 


~ 


“et of oe 


Poth Ay CoP ee, OS ie MOE Sie Nr 9, Og ERO ra ‘eft 


PAGE TWELVE 


“ oe es abi gant Fer Fe in 
TUS OP ae ere ees, 


~ THE C 


- 


a oo he pe. paar ts tla “team Bi ke CZ ’ 
se ee Ni li ae ae tha 
tg ST . Nye «Sige OS tage 

4 2 ; ne : 


Fi ORME FS ME PE PUES Sey gh Sf Ma ee ree 
ed LD Pape Pe eee, OR Leg ot ee 
Sia at i a UA Mah Ee aia a 

+ ad —_ Ra 
- q — 


ATLANTA, 


Se hee 
tan i 
- 


af + beet ot 
Mo eae no eae 
aN ee BANS 


EN Seg ee 
rr ey -< 


1934. 


ee at 


- . n *%. cf) re Svein oe J, P — * a 
ST ae ae Ee | ge eS SR RAS et a i Z PS Rg geen ee 
+ a eee oe at ee N 2 = 
a e ale * 


Cross Sections of Life 
In Gate City of South 


Roy LeCraw will speak before the 
Men of Justice at 7:45 o'clock to- | 
night in their assembly rooms at 1214 | 
Mortgage Guarantee building. His 
subject will be “The Men of Justice, | 
Its Principles and Purposes.” 


day. This will give an opportunity 
to all those who wish to do 60 to en- 
ter pleas of guilty before Judge G._H. 
Howard this week. 


Persons interested in dramatics are 


invited to attend a meeting to be held 


Planning to dispose of as many) 
jail cases as possible before the sum- 
mer recess of criminal court, Lewis 
P. Jones, calendar clerk of Fulton su- 
perior eourt, will submit a list of all 
untried jail cases to the sheriff to- 


— ee 


the PRINTING HOUSE of 


WEBB & MARTIN 


Producers of fine printing at lowest 
possible prices. Call or write us for 
quotations. 116 Mitchell Se., S. W 


PHONE WALNUT 6838 


| 
| 


Insurance 


Spratlin, Harrington & Thomas 


Telephones: Wainut 0147-44 


—_—— 


Always forging ahead, this chap. 
His competitors think he gets the 
breaks. He’s just a bit more alive, 
that’s all. 

How does he do it? 

One of his secrets is a wise lunch, 
especially these warm days. Crisp, 
tasty Shredded Wheat, with cool 
milk and fruit. 

This natural whole wheat food 
contains carbohydrates for energy, 


at 7:30 o’clock Tuesday night in the 
auditorium of the Auburn branch of 
the Carnegie library. A little theater 
movement is being planned. 


Public Speakers’ Club of the At-| 
lanta School of Oratory and Expres- 
sion, 


402 Wesley Memorial Church 
building, will discuss “Railroads” at 


‘the regular meeting to be held at 6 


o'clock Tuesday night. 


T. Jones, of 1638 DeKalb avenue, 
who was admitted to Grady hospital 
Friday night for observation, as the 
result of a poison dose, was reported 


to be a Jittle improved Sunday night. 


A. B. Hattaway, 63. of a Wash- | 
ington street address, was lodged in| 


the city jail Sunday night on a war- 


rant from Hamilton county, Tennes- | 


see, of which Chattanooga is the coun- 
ty seat, by Patrolman J. F. 
The warrant charges issuance ol 


Plenty of pep all afternoon! 


vitamins to resist disease, and bran 
to keep you regular. It’s easily di- 
gested, See how it keeps you going. 
Notice how clear your mind is— 
how well you feel. No wonder! 
Shredded Wheat is whole wheat, 
double cooked—nothing added, 
nothing taken away. It tastes good. 
It’s easily digested. 

Don’t forget: Start Shredded 
Wheat for lunch today. 


HREDDED 


WHEAT 


HAAS-HOWELL BLDG. 


FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS 


Immediately available 
ON HIGH-CLASS RESIDENTIAL AND BUSINESS PROPERTY 
In addition to the usual types of loans offered by Life Insurance 
companies, we offer home owners a loan payable monthly at 6 per 
cent simple interest. The payments are $8.00 per $1,000 per month, 
which is the total payment of interest and principal. 


HAAS HOWELL & DODD 


INSURANCE 


PHONE WA. 3111 


Welchel. | 


worthless checks, Hattaway said he 
would fight extradition. 


Summer session of the University 
System of Georgia Evening school will 
open at 5:30 o'clock this afternoon at 
223 Walton street, N. W. The session 
will last for nine weeks. 


Burglars who entered the Dunbar 
Barber Shop, at 792 Marietta street, 
through a rear door early Sunday 
morning were frightened away by 
passers-by who summoned police. The 
burglars escaped without taking any- 
thing. 


Big Bethel choir, under the aus- 
pices of Circle No. 5, will give a pro- 
gram of spirituals in the Sunday 
school auditorium of the St. Mark 
Methodist Episcopal church, at Peach- 
tree and Fifth streets, at 8 o'clock 
Tuesday night. 


Eighth season of the Bert Adams 
Boy Scout camp, at Vinings, under the 
auspices of the Atlanta Council, Inc., 
Boy Scouts of America, opens today. 
The camp will be open for the next 
eight weeks. 


Atlanta Food Promotion Club will 
meet at the Henry Grady hotel at 
| 12:30 o'clock Wednesday, it was an- 


president. The summer activities of 
the club will be discussed 
meeting, he said. 

James Thompson Williams, 
Piedmont avenue, retired real estate 
man, Sunday was reported to be crit- 


ically ill at his estate at Nacoochee, | 


‘4 School ie 


(sa. He has been ill for the last year, 
hut became critical only a few days 
ago. 


DAGNEAU OBSERVES 


| 


day afternoon for California, where 
he will spend his vacation. He will 
return in August. 

Ordained in Washington, D. C., Fa- 
ther Dagneau served in Salt Lake 
City, in New Orleans, La., and was 
on the faculty of Jefferson College in 
Louisiana befote coming to Atlanta 
eight years ago to become head of 
Marist College. 


120 Gallons of Milk 
Hijacked at Augusta 


AUGUSTA, Ga., June 24.—(/)— 
Sheriff M. Gary Whittle, of Rich- 
mond county, said tonight he was 
searching for five masked armed men 
who, he said, hi-jacked a Waynesboro 
milk truck en route to Augusta this 
morning, dumping 120 gallons of milk. 

The truck was driven by a negro 
and belonged to W. C. Hillhouse, of 
Waynesboro, largest milk producer in 


‘the Augusta area, who has been de- 


; 
} 


nounced Sunday by E. F. Johnson, ' 


at this 


livering to the local market for 35 
years. 

Sheriff Whittle said the negro did 
not recognize the armed men, but told 
the sheriff the five men halted the 


‘truck near a creek just outside Au- 
gusta, where two of them stuck pis- 


1284. 


} 


25TH ANNIVERSARY 


OF HIS PRIESTHOOD 


re 


Father Dagneau, 


tols in his face and made him turn 
into a by-road, where they dumped 
the milk, 


MACON, Ga., June 24.—(/)—Four 
south Georgia school teachers, stu- 


dents at the Mercer University sum- 


widely 


known priest and president of Marist | 


(‘ollege, celebrated the twenty-fifth 
anniversary of his priesthood Sunday. 

He was the celebrant of 
high 


solemn | 
mass Sunday morning at the 


Sacred Heart church, and the Most | 
| Rev. Michael J. Keyes, of Savannah, | 


| bishop of the Georgia diocese, 
‘ciated at the ceremonies. The Rev. Fa- 
ther E. P. McGrath, pastor of 
| Sacred Heart church, preached the 
‘sermon and Father McGuire was dea- 
| con and Father Luckett was sub- 
| deacon, 


of fi- | 
the | 


| 
| 
| 


' 
| 


mer school, were injured late this 
afternoon south of Perry, Ga., in an 
automobile accident and two of them 


vate infirmary here for treatment. 

Miss Willa Hasty, of Doerun, and 
Mrs. Julia Webb Elrod, of Miami, 
Fla., were admitted for treatment of 
serious injuries, the exact nature of 
which had not been determined late 
tonight. Miss Evelyn Parrish, of 
Moultrie, and Mrs. C. M. Kendall, of 
Funston, were given emergency treat- 
ment. 

Mrs. Elrod was driving her car 
north to Macon after a week-end visit 


| Father Dagneau held a reception at | with Miss Parrish’s family in Moul- 
the rectory following the services and | trie, when the machine got out of con- 


was congratulated by his 


friends on(|trol on the rain-swept highway and 


‘his 25 vears as a priest. He left Sun- overturned. 
} * 


for your 


This Fan Spells 
COMFORT 


Store—Home—Office 


Restaurant or Shop 


operating. 


905 Bernina Ave., N. E. 


Comfort, because it changes the air every few minutes 
— exhausts the stale and used air, keeping a fresh sup- 
ply circulating through the room where the fan is 


Easily and quickly installed at a moderate cost. Costs 
almost next to nothing to operate. Call or write. 


Bowers & Barksdale 


Atlanta 


Phone WA. 1484 


' daughter, 
Pomona, 


Crash Near Perry 


| tournament. 


JUDGE W. C. MUNDAY, 
ATLANTA LAWYER, DIES 


Widely-Known Attorney and 


One-Time Buckhead Jurist 
Admitted to Bar at 17. 


Judge William C. Munday Sr., 
widely known Atlanta lawyer and 
father of W. C. (Bill) Munday Jr., 
of the Atlanta Journal sports depart- 
ment, died early Sunday morning at 
his residence at 829 Oglethorpe ave- 
nue; S. W. He was 58. 

Judge Munday had apparently been 
in good health Saturday and his death 
was unexpected. Members of the fam- 
ily said he retired as usual and pre- 
sumably died of a heart attack while 
asleep. 

Born in Columbus, Ga.. June 27. 
1876, Judge Munday read law and 
was admitted to the Georgia bar when 
he was only 17 years of age. He 
came to Atlanta soon afterward and 
had practiced law here ever since. He 
was judge of the old district court 
at Buckhead for 11 years and was 
a member of the Atlanta Bar Asso- 
ciation and the Georgia Bar Associa. 
tion. He also was a Mason. 

Surviving are his wife; another son. 
David FE. Munday, of Atlanta: a 
Mrs. Emily Chapman, of 
Fla.: a brother. David K. 
Munday, of Columbus: and two grand- 


children, Harriet and Katherine Chap- 


man, of Pomona. 

Funeral services are to be held at 
11 o’clock this morning at the chapel 
of Harry G. Poole and the body will 
be taken to Columbus, Ga.. for burial 


were admitted to the Oglethorpe pri- | the old family cemetery. 


Judge Hugh Dorsey. Solicitor-Gen- 


‘eral John A. Boykin, Walter E. Har- 


well, Judge Luther Rosser Jr., W. E. 
Coruwall and Arthur E. Deadman will 
act as pallbearers. 


FEAGIN, WALTON WIN 
BRIDGE TOURNEY CUP 


The Sterling Jewelry’s Company's 
handsome trophy given for top score 
in the two-session bridge tournament 
held at the Terrace Bridge Club Sat- 
urday afternoon and night was won by 
Jack Feagin and Al Walton, with the 
score of 247 points. 

Mrs. William Coleman and Len 
Putnam tied Dr. J Wood 
John Marshall for second place wita 
a score of 245 1-2 points. T. E. Tol- 
leson and John ‘Tyner, with 
points, were third. 

Thirty-two players took part in the 
Thirty boards were play- 
ed at each session. 


‘PROBLEM OF CHURCH .. 
OUTLINED BY HOLMES announced 


The problem of Christianity is in 
reaching the “unreached” persons. 
Rev. B. R. Holmes, president and 
founder of Holmes Institutc said 
Sunday afternoon in a sermon at the 
First A. M. E. church in Newnan. He 
pointed out that many persons who 
have membership in churches do not 
attend and that the majority in the 
country do not belong to churches. 
deplored the fact that the religious 


movement is being heard by the mi- | 


nority. “The world can only he saved 
by those who are the followers of the 
teaching of Jesus,” he said. 


and | 


242 | 


MORTUARY 


MRS. WALTER E. LOMAX. 


Mrs. Walter E. Lombax, 61, of 2209 Cot- 
tage Grove avenue, died Sunday morning at 
a private hospital. Two daughters, Mrs. 
W. D. Langley and Mrs. L. D. Estes, and 
seven grandchildren survive her. Funeral 
rites will be held at 4 o'clock this after- 
noon at Spring Hill. Dr. W. H. Knight 
and the Rev. John W. Ham will officiate 
and burial will be in Greenwood cemetery. 


L. M. DODD. 


L. M. Dodd, 66-year-old retired grocer, 
died Sunday afternoon at his residence. 
Surviving are two brothers, R. L. and §&. 
M. Dodd, of Atlanta, and a sister, Mrs. 
N. D. Mash, of Rutledge, Ala. The funeral 
will be conducted by the Rev. Jesse M. 
Dodd at 10 o'clock Tuesday morning at the 
chapel of A. ©, Hemperley and Sons.  In- 
terment will be in the Bethsaida cemetery. 


MRS. ADDIE TOMLINSON. 


| Funeral services will be held at 11! 
o'clock this morning at Spring Hill for 
Mrs. Addie Tomlinson, who died Saturday 
at her residence at 8 Prescott street, N. E. 
Dr. Richard Orme Flinn will officiate and 
the body will be taken br H. M. Patterson 
and Son to Cedartown, Ga., for burial. 


DAN M. GOODLIN. 

rites were held Sunday for Dan 
M. Goodlin, Fulton county deputy sheriff, 
who shot himself fatally Friday at the 
county courthouse, The Rev. A. W. Huteh- 
ins and the Rev. M. A. Cooper officiated 
at services at the chapel of the J. Aus- 
tin Dillon Company and interment was in 
Greenwood cemetery. 


~~ aS 


MRS. J. PRIESTLEY ORME. 


' Last tribute to Mrs. J. Priestley Orme, 
prominent Atlanta woman, was paid Sundays 
lafternoon at Spring Hill, with Dr. Richard 
(Orme Flinn officiating. Burial was in Oak- 
iland cemetery. Mrs. Orme, the former 
|Miss Coribel Venable, was a member of a 
pioneer Atlanta family and was a part 
owner of Stone Mountain She died Friday 
at her country home, Mont Rest, near thie 
; mountain. 
; 


Last 


ewe 


HENRY B. HARDIN. 


The funeral of Henry RB. Hardin. 19. 
former Atlantan who was killed June 17 in 
an automobile accident in Miami, Fla., will 
be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon from 
ithe chapel of Awtry and Lowndes, with 
(Dr. W. T. Hambs, Dr. J. W. Johnson and 
the Rev. W. A. Shelton officiating. In- 
terment will be in West View cemetery. 


WILLIAM A. CONKLE JR. 


Rites will be conducted at 10:30 o'clock 
this morning at the Rock Baptist church 
for William Andrew Conkle Jr.. 23, of 2133 
Memorial drive, who died Saturday. The 
| Rev. M. I.. Albert will officiate and burial 
will be in the churchvard. Howard L. 
|Carmichael is in charge. 
| OTIS LEE MURRAY. 
| Final services for Otis Lee Murray. 58. 
lof 424 Orange street, who died Saturday 
at a hospital, will be held at 3:30 o'clock 
| this afternoon at the chapel of the J, Ans- 
| tin Dillon company, and burial will be in 
Greenwood cemetery. 


E. ©. HALE. 


FE. C. Hale, 80. who for many years was 
active in Masonry, died Sunday afternoon 
at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. J. M. 
at 835 Zachry street, S. W. Three 
B. F. Woodward and 
Stevens, of Atlanta. and Mrs. 
| A. A. Lancaster, of Clermont, Ga.. and «ix 
| sons, J. G., C. C.. M. M.. and D. C. Hale. 
(of Atlanta, and W. M. and €. S. Hale. of 
|Hexson, Tenn. Mr. Hale was a member of 
the Battle Hill Lodge. No. 523, F. & A. 
'M., and of the Gordon Street Baptist 
Arrangements for funeral will be 
by Awtry & Lowndes. 


| Long, 
other daughters, 
pare. TF. - 2 


Mrs. 


MRS. ELIZABETH WALLACE. 


Mrs. Elizabeth Wallace died Sunday aft- 
ernoon at her residence, at 1410 Bankhead 
avenue. She was 8&4. Surviving 
daughter, Mrs. Fred Foster, and two sone, 
J. L. and BE. W. Wallace, of Atlanta. Last 
services are to be held at 10 o'clock Tues- 
day morning at the chapel of the J. Ans- 
tin Dillon Company, the Rev. L. E. Smith 
officiating, and burial will be in West View 


are a 


| cemetery. 
© | 


| WILLIAM A. LOGAN. 

| William A. Logan, 58, dropped dead at 
| hia residence at 536 #£=x°\North McDonongh 
ij street, Decatur, Sundar. Funeral arrange- 
ments will be announced ber A. &. Turner. 


' 


Tapping maple trees for 
maple sugar to flavor 


tobacco. 


Y 


bs sir. whals tn 
the tin that counts 


THER tobaccos may use the same 
kind of a tin as Velvet... but 
there’s no use fooling—it’s the tobacco 
inside the tin that counts. 
Velvet is not like other smoking to- 
baccos. The tobacco is extra good Ken- 
tucky Burley to begin with 
—then it is flavored with just 
the right amount of pure 
maple sugar for extra good 
taste and aroma. 
The right tobacco—the right flavor 
— made right—Velvet is cool mild smok- 
ing. Try it in pipe or cigarette. 


FINAL SERVICES HELD 
FOR GEORGE ECKFORD 


Old Friends of Slain Fulton 
Legislator Serve as Pall- 
bearers at Funeral Rites. 


George A. Eckford, Fulton county 
legislator who died Saturday after- 
noon of a bullet wound his divorced 
wife, Mrs. Mae Eckford. said she in- 
flicted when she mistook him for a 
burglar Friday night, was buried Sun- 
day at West View. 

Services were held at Spring Hill, 
with old friends of the widely known 
Atlantan serving as pallbearers. The 
list selected included Alderman 4. 
Everett Millican, Judge Luther Z. 
Rosser, Ernest C. Bell, Henry Rob- 
inson, Charles Rawson and Perry 
Adair. 

Eckford died as surgeons prepared 


to give him a_ second blood 
tusion. Shortly before his 
Chief of Detectives <A. 
announced that action of recorder’s 
eourt in dismissing the case of “sus- 
picion” against Mrs. KEckford Sat- 
urday was conclusive, 

Mrs. Eckford told police 
shot her former husband 
had been notified by 


trans- 
death 


she 
she 
F'ri- 


that 
after 
neighbors 


| 
ing about her home. She fired at. 
random at dim figures in the back- 
yard, she said, adding that vhe did 
not know at the time that one of 
them was her former husband. 

_ Police, called by Mrs. Eckford. ar- 
rived shortly after the shooting and 
found Eckford stili conscious. He 
had been shot through the abdomen 
with a .38 caliber bullet, and police 
said he held a short iron bar in his 
hand. Identity of his companion was 
not learned. 


-——— 
tae ae 


| Funeral Notices 


O’NEAL—Funeral services for the in-| 
lant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E.| 
O'Neal, of 904 North Central ave-| 
nue, will be announced later by! 
Harold H. Sims. a 
CASH—Funeral services for Mr. Car- 
ley Cash will be held this (Mon- 
day) afternoon at 3 o'clock from 
Providence Baptist church. Rev. 
W. F. Burdett will officiate. Inter- 
ment churchyard. Harold H. Sims 
funeral director. 


HALE—Mr. Eldridge Clinton Hale 
died at the residence of his daugh- 
ter, Mrs. J. M. Long, 835 Zachery 
street, S. W., Sunday afternoon. 
Surviving are four daughters, six 
sons. Funeral arrangements an- 
nounced later. Awtry & Lowndes. 


EIDSON—The friends and relatives 
of Miss Alta Kidson, and Mr. and 
Mrs. H. J. Eidson are invited to 
attend the funeral of Miss Alta 
Eidson this (Monday) morning, 
June 25, 1934, at 10:30 o'clock at 
the graveside in Collins Spring 
cemetery. Rev. Wills Jones. H. M. 
Patterson & Son. 


| 


TOMLINSON—The friends and rela- 


COPPINGER—Miss 


day night that two-men were prowl-|- 


| F uneral N otices | 


BLOUNT—The funeral services of 
Mr. John A. Blount will be conduct- 
ed this (Monday) morning at 11 
o'clock from the chapel of J. Austin 
Dillon Co. Rev. John L. Yost will 
officiate, Interment, National ceme- 
tery, Marietta, Ga. 


DARLINGTON—Died, Mr. James §. 
Darlington, of 1042 Washita avenue, 
N. E., June 24, 1934. He is sur- 
vived by his wife and nieces, Miss 
Mary Hightower and Miss Martha 
Hightower. Funeral arrangements 
to be announced later. H. M. Pat- 
terson & Son. 


All 


HARDIN—tThe funeral of Mr. Henry 
R. Hardin will be held this (Mon- 
day) afternoon at 3 o clock from 
the chapel of Awtry & Lowndes. 
Dr. W. T. Hamby. Dr. J. W. Jobn- 
son, Rev. W. A. Shelton will offi- 
ciate. Interment, West View ceme- 
tery. « 


Ida Moreland 
Coppinger died at her residence, S00 
Juniper street, N. E., Sunday, June 
24, 1934. She is survived by one 
nephew, Mr. Morris F. Dow, of 
Washington, ID. C. Funeral ar- 
rangements will be announced later. 
Brandon - Bond-Condon Co., 860 
Peachtree street, N. E. 


-—— — os re ee - > 


Lamar Poole! GORMAN—Mrs. Katie Gorman died 


in Spencer, W. Va., June 23, 1954. 
She is survived by her husband, 
Mr. Patsie Gorman, and one broth- 
er, Mr. Ed. Riley. Funeral serv- 
ices and interment will be April 
22. 1935. Brandon-Bond-Condon 
Co.. S60 Peachtree street, N. FE. 


LEVERETT—Miss Virginia Leverett, 
of 404 Sycamore drive, Decatur. 
died Sunday evening at a private 
sanitarium in her 23d year. She is 
survived by her mother, Mrs. Elma 
Hardeman, and one brother. Dan 
Hardeman. The remains will 
carried to Birmingham, Ala.. 
(Monday) afternoon at r 

for the funeral and interment. A. &. 
Turner, funeral director. 


MURRAY—The friends of Mr. and 


Mrs. Otis Lee Murray, Mr. and Mrs. 
H. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. 
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Wilson 
and Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Barrows 
are invited to attend the funeral of 
Mr. Otis Lee Murray this (Mon- 
day) afternon at 3:30 o’cloek from 
the chapel of J. Austin Dillon Coe. 
Rev. W. Lee Cuts will officiate. 
Interment, Greenwood. 


— ee 


‘DODD—Mr. LL. M. Dodd, of 534 


Cooper street, S. W.. passed away 
at the residence Sunday afternoon. 
He is survived by two brothers, R. 
I. and F. M. Dodd, of Atlanta; sis- 
ter. Mrs. N. D, Mash. of Rutledge, 
Ala. The funeral will be held io- 
morrow (Tuesday) morning at 10 
o'clock at the cnupel of A. C. Hem 
perley & Sons. Rev. Jesse M. Dodd 
will officiate. Interment, Bethsaida 
cemetery. 


BAYNE—Mr. Hendley V. Barne 
passed away Sunday at a private 
sanitarium in Muskogee, Okla. He 
is survived by his mother. Mrs. Ella 
FE. Bayne; four sisters, Mrs. John 
Stone, Mrs. Lon Smith. all of At- 
lanta;: Mrs. Joe Griffin, Temple, 
Ga.: Mrs. B. Ntradley, of Texas; 


At AIA 


Em ARI 


brother-in-law, Mr. John W. Alex- ; 


ands sister-in-law, Mrs. 
Georgia Bayne. both of 
Funeral arrangements will be an- 


nounced by Harry G. Poole on ar- 


ander: 


tives of Mrs. Addie Tomlinson, Mr. 
and Mrs. E. L. Ledbetter, Miss Min- 
nie Tomlinson, Miss Amie Tomlin- 
son, Miss Octavia Tomlinson, Miss 
Louise Tomlinson, Mr. J. H. Led-. 
better, Mr. L. L. Ledbetter, Char-| 
lotte, N. C., and Mr. EF. R. Ledbet-! 
ter, Oklahoma City, Okla., are in-| 
vited to attend the funeral of Mrs. | 
Addie Tomlinson this (Monday)! 
morning, June 25, 1934, at 11) 
o’clock at Spring Hill. Dr. Richard 
Orme Flinn will officiate. Inter-| 
ment in Cedartown, Ga. M. 
Patterson & Son. 


LOMAX—The friends and relatives 
of Mrs. Walter E. Lomax. Mr. and 
Mrs. D. Langley, Mrs. L. D. 
Estes, Miss Laura Langley, Miss 
Dorothy Langley, Miss Mary J.ang- 
ley, Everett Langley, Carrojl Dean 
Estes, Claude Estes Jr., and Mr. 
and Mrs. W. J. Weaver are invited 
to attend the funeral of Mrs. Wal- 
ter E. Lomax this (Monday) after- 
noon, June 25, 1934, at 4 o'clock 
at Spring Hill. Dr. W. H. Knight 
and Rev. John W. Ham will offi- 
ciate. Interment in Greenwood 
cemetery. The following gentlemen 
will serve as pallbearers and please 
meet at Spring Hill at 3:45 o'clock :| 
Mr. T. M. Johnson, Mr. E. S. Ma-| 
bry. Mr. John M. Mauldin, Mr. W. 
J. Weaver, Mr. Arthur Golden and 
Mr. T. J. Griffith, H. M. Patter- 
son & Son. 


Lodge N otices _ 


A specia? assembly of 
Euclid Council No. 33, R. & 
S. M., will be held tonight 
(Monday), June 25th, in W. 
D. Luckie Masonic Temple, 
beginning at 5:15 o'clock. 
All the degrees of the Coun- 


cil will be conferred in full dramatic form. 
Refreshments, All qualified visiting Com- 
panions cordially invited. 

NELSON CRIST, IDL 
J. A. BISHOP, Recorder. 


Master. 


The regular communication of 
College Park Lodge, No. 454, F. 
& <A. M., will be held this 
(Monday) evening, June 24, 1934, 
in the Masonic Hall, Stephenson 
bnilding, College Park, Ga., at! 
The Entered Apprentice degree 
conferred. All duly qualified 
brethren are invited to attend. 

} EB. PULLEN, Worshipful Master. 
Ww. 8 NORTHCUTT, Secretary. 


A regular communication of 
Hapeville Lodge No. 590, F. & 
~ M., will be held this (Mon- 
evening at 8 o'clock, The 
Fellowcraft Degree will be con- 
ferred, Visiting brethren are cor- 
dially invited to attend. By order of 
CLAUDE VY. BAILEY, W. M., 


rival of the remains in Atlanta. 


Atlanta. * 


BAKER—The friends of Mr. Howard £_ 


Baker. Mrs. Estelle Baker, 
Bryant Baker, Mrs. Ella Reed are 
invited to attend the funeral of Mr. 
Howard Baker this (Monday) aft- 
ernoon at 4 o'clock from the chapel 
of Harry G. Poole. Rev. Stuart R. 
Oglesby will officiate. Interment, 
Ben Hill Methodistechurchyard. The 
following gentlemen will serve as 
pallbearers and meet at the chapel 
at 3:45 o'clock: Mr. Leonard 
Fisher, Mr. John Hickman, Mr. 
Wallace Norris, Mr. 
Mr. Kenneth Zimmerman, 


WILLIAMS—tThe friends and rela- 
tives of Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Wil- 
liams, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Williams, 
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Williams, Miss 
Irania Crews, Mr. Willie Smith, 
Mr. C. U. Walker. Mr. and Mrs. 
Daniel Emmet. Misses Louise. 
Ruth, Velma Williams are invited 
to attend the funeral of Mrs. J. N. 
Williams this (Monday) afternoon, 


Mr. &. 


Jack Clark, 3 


at 2:30 o'clock, June 25, 1984, from .... 


Bellwood Baptist church. Rer. W. 
S. Pruitt officiating. Interment. 
Mount Harmony churchyard, 
Milton county. West Side Funeral 


old ™ 


home. 902 Bankhead Ave., in charze. * 


BRINSFIELD—The friends and rel- 
atives of Rev. and Mrs. J. W. 
Brinsfield, 
Miss Elizabeth Brinsfield, : 
Sarah Brinsfield and J. W. Brins- 
field Jr.. all of Douglasville. Ga.; 


FE. Caldwell, of Atlanta, Ga., 
invited to attend the funeral of Mrs. 
J. W. Brinsfield this (Monday) aft- 
ernoon at 2:30 o'clock from 
residence at Douglasville, Ga. 
terment in Hollywood cemetery. 


In- 


lL. Byrd will officiate. Dodson & 
Nunnally, Douglasville, Ga. 


R. (Elizabeth) Wallace, Mr. 
Mrs. EF. W. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Z. Foster and 


family, Mr. J. L. Wallace, and Mr. 


Mrs. R. R. (Elizabeth) Wallace te- 
morrow (Tuesday) moraing at 10 
o'clock from the chapel of J. Aus:'n 
Dillon Co. Rev. L. E. Smith ana 
Rev. W. P. Hines will 


ing gentlemen will please aci as 
pallbearers and meet at tne chapel 
at 9:45 a. m.: Mr. H. G. Hewatt, 
Mr. R. Ll. Deese, Mr. T. W. Deese. 
Mr. A. B. Timms, Mr. W. L. Wood 


C. FRANK MOORE, Secretary. 


The regular communication of| 
Oakland City Lodge No. 373, F. 
& A. M., will be held this eve- 
ning in their hall, 1171 Lee 
street, S. W. Lodge opens at 7:30 


p. m. This is Saint John's Day 
celebration and an address will be made 
by Brother G. Everette Millican. Refresh- 
ments will be served. All duly qualified Ma. 
sons cordially invited to attend, 

Ry order of J.P. PLYNN, W. M., 
J. D. WOOTAN, Secretary. 


Your Money With Us 


(- 


Save 


— 
— 

we MARTY 7} 

a 

£RAL HOME LUA 2 


[ise syorae 


FIRST MUTUAL 
BUTLDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 
of MUarha +». 


and Mr. J. B. Hall. 


MUNDAY—tThe friends of Judge and 
Mrs. W. (. Munday, Mr. David E. 
Munday, Mr. and Mrs. W. @. Mun- 
dav Jr., Mrs. Emily Chapman, Mr. 
and Mrs. David G. Munday and 
Harriette and Katherine Chapman 
are invited to attend the funeral of 
Judge W. C. Munday this (Monday) 
morning at 11 o'clock from the 
chapel of Harry G. Poole. Rev. 
W. H. Faust and Rer. W. B. Black- 
well will officiate. Interment, Co- 
lumbus. Ga. The following gentle- 
men will please serve as pallbear- 
ers and meet at the chapel at 10:45 
o'clock: Judge John D. Humphries, 
Judge Hugh Dorsey, Mr. Walter 
Harwell. Mr. G. H. Carnwell, Mr. 
Arthur Dedmond and Mr. John A. 


Boykin. 


(COLORED.) 
SHEETS—Mrs. Josie Sheets passed 
away June 24, Funeral announced 
later. Pollard Funeral Home. 


WAR DEPARTMENT, Office of Construct- 
ing Quartermaster, Maxwell Field, Alabama. 
Sealed proposals wil) be received at this 
office until 10:00 A. M., ©. 8. T., July 6, 
1934, and then publicly opened for construc- 
tion of Roads, Driveways, Sidewalks, Cul- 
certs and Storm Sewers for Officers’ Area 
at Maxwell Field, Alabama. Prospective 
bidders may obtain plans and specifications 
upon deposit of certified check in amount 


FISHER—Mrs. Nanie Clifford Fish- 


er passed away June 24, 1934, at 
a local sanitarium. Funeral an- 
nounced later. Murdaugh Brothers. 


GREEN—Mr. King Green passed 
away at a local hospital June 24, 
Funeral announced later. Poulard 
Funeral Home. 


SPIKES—The funeral of Mr. Robert 
Lee Spikes will be held this (Mon- 
day) afternoon at 1 oclock from 
the chapel. Body will be sent Tues- 
day morning to Tate, Ga., for inter- 


of $5.00, made payable to the Treasurer of 
the United States. 


ment. Sellers Bros. 


Mr. W. M. Brinsfield and Mrs. EF. ° 


are ; 


WALLACE—The friends of Mrs. a 7 
and . 


Wallace and family, | 
and Mrs. W. J. Laney and family ' 


are invited to attend the funeral of ° 


officiate. | 
Interment, West View. The foliow- « 


Miss Anne Brinsfield, « 
Miss , 


ne ; 


Rev. Marvin Williams and Rev. H. -